The Stars Look Down
FROM THE PEN OF "THE CITADEL'S" BOLD AUTHOR!
Davey Fenwick leaves his mining village on a university scholarship intent on returning to better support the miners against the owners. But he falls in love with Jenny who gets him to marry her and return home as local schoolteacher before finishing his degree.
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Cast

Michael Redgrave
Davey Fenwick

Margaret Lockwood
Jenny Sunley

Emlyn Williams
Joe Gowlan

Nancy Price
Martha Fenwick - Davey's mother

Allan Jeayes
Richard Barras - the mine owner

Edward Rigby
Robert Fenwick - Davey's father

Desmond Tester
Hughie Fenwick - Davey's brother

Cecil Parker
Stanley Millington

Linden Travers
Mrs. Laura Millington

Milton Rosmer
Harry Nugent, MP

George Carney
Slogger Gowlan

Ivor Barnard
Wept

Olga Lindo
Mrs. Sunley

Aubrey Mallalieu
Hudspeth

Kynaston Reeves
Strother

Clive Baxter
Pat Reedy

James Harcourt
Will

Frederick Burtwell
Union Official

Frank Atkinson
Miner

David Horne
Mr. Wilkins
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Michael Redgrave is the local boy done good, when he wins a scholarship to go to university to train to be a teacher. Unfortunately, he has fallen in love with the rather fickle "Jenny" (Margaret Lockwood) who has a bit of a venal streak. Curtailing his studies, he returns to live with her in his boyhood town intent on improving the lot of his community - but he is soon disillusioned when he sees his wife still keen on her flashy old flame "Joe" (Emlyn Williams) and that his elderly father looks set to have to work the mines for years to come... He accidentally discovers that the mine is unsafe, and determines to bring this to the attention of the council to avert disaster, but will they listen? Carol Reed allows this story plenty of room to breathe. Though not complex, we can see the characterisations develop as the story seems to head, unstoppably, towards disaster in quite a compelling fashion. Redgrave, Williams and Allan Jeayes as mine owner "Barras" work well to create a solid, if a bit dryly told, story of greed and exploitation with some superbly claustrophobic mining photography to add authenticity.
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