Wishing Well (1954)
4/10
The Postman Always sticks his nose in where it doesn't belong.
19 May 2022
Warning: Spoilers
And he doesn't ring twice. In fact, he doesn't ring at all. He just shows up and tells you what's in your mail, and you're expected to just laugh it off. Eynon Evans lives at the Welsh Country Inn, the Wishing Well, romances proprietor Brenda de Banzie and make sure that everybody deposits a coin in the wishing well on the property, having a contraption at the bottom of the well that collects them so he can easily pull them out. Maybe this was funny in 1954, but he's insufferable as he sticks his nose in everyone's business and nobody tells him off. The group of travelers staying at the end during this particular incident includes a married couple who don't get along, a nurse who lost her husband and is still in mourning and an insufferable old woman who complains about everything. When she indicates that her room is so small that she won't be able to get out, I had to scream at her through my TV screen, well then you need to go on a diet.

The area in which they live is pretty but very quiet, so perhaps that's a motivation for his boredom to try to interfere in the romantic issues of everybody who checks in and out. When the unhappily married husband decides he's leaving and wants to pay the bill, Evans spends more time than he should trying to talk him out of it. In fact, he's sticking his nose so much into people's business that you have to wonder when does he find time to deliver the mail. Outside of the beautiful surroundings on the gorgeous mountain road, the only interesting thing about this film is a presence of a young Petula Clark. Other than that, I was truly bored.
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