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poster of Holiday Camp
Rating: 6.1/10 by 9 users

Holiday Camp (1947)

The Huggett family go to a holiday camp, and get involved in crooked card players, a murderer on the run, and a pregnant young girl and her boyfriend missing from home.

Directing:
  • Ken Annakin
Writing:
  • Godfrey Winn
  • Muriel Box
  • Mabel Constanduros
  • Sydney Box
  • Peter Rogers
Stars:
Release Date: Tue, Aug 05, 1947

Rating: 6.1/10 by 9 users

Alternative Title:

Country:
United Kingdom
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 37 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: holiday camp, huggett family

Flora Robson
Esther Harman
Dennis Price
Sq. Ldr. Hardwick
Jack Warner
Joe Huggett
Kathleen Harrison
Mrs. Ethel Huggett
Hazel Court
Joan Huggett
Yvonne Owen
Angela Kirby
Esmond Knight
Camp Announcer
Jimmy Hanley
Jimmy Gardner
Peter Hammond
Harry Huggett
Esma Cannon
Elsie Dawson
Jeannette Tregarthen
Valerie Thompson
Beatrice Varley
Valerie's Aunt
Susan Shaw
Patsy Crawford
Jane Hylton
Receptionist
Pamele Bramah
Beauty Queen
Jack Raine
Detective
John Stone
Detective
Emrys Jones
Michael Halliday

CinemaSerf

I can safely say that I have never been to an holiday camp - the BBC series "Hi-Di-HI" that ran in the UK in the 1980s always made sure that never happened. By then, though, we had international travel at our fingertips. In the late 1940s, people were still having their food rationed let alone being able to hop on a flight to Florida or Fuerteventura. The "Huggetts" - led by Jack Warner and the indomitable Kathleen Harrison take their family to one such camp for, ostensibly, a nice rest. Ha, well good luck with that - before long they are involved in dodgy card games, and absconded pair of expectant teenagers and a fleeing murderer. (You wonder why i never fancied such places?) The Huggetts were a famous cinema family in the 1940s, their decency and family values imbued well by the strong, likeable cast. Usually their efforts were all augmented by some guest stars - and here, with the rather lonely figure of Flora Robson and the distinctly caddish Dennis Price, is no different. It resonates now, as ever, because it is about ordinary people - not wealthy or profligate, just folks trying to keep their lives afloat after the war and there is plenty of pithy, quick witted comedy that, though dated and a little too stereotyped for 60 years on, is still enjoyable to watch.


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