Last Holiday (1950)
7/10
A brilliant performance by Alec Guinness with Priestley's witty script adding a strong element of social satire.
10 December 2022
Unadventurous and safe agricultural equipment salesman George Bird (Alec Guinness) is diagnosed with Lampington's disease and told within a matter of time he will eventually painlessly slip into a coma before passing on. On the advice of his doctor as George has no close friends, is unmarried, and has no living family he liquidates his savings and insurance with his intention being to travel to the opulent Regal Hotel with his plans to spend every bit of his money and live more than he had up to that point.

Last Holiday is a 1950 comic drama directed by theater turned film director Henry Cass, and written by noted novelist, playwright, and political commentator J. B. Priestley. While a relatively small film in its day, retrospective analysis has been favorable to it, particularly in the performances of Alec Guinness as George Bird, Kay Walsh as Mrs. Poole, and Sid James as Joe Clarence with many divided on the film's "trick ending". Despite some very questionable decisions involving the ending, Last Holiday is a very poignant story that works on both a humorous level as well as a character based one.

The plot of Last Holiday is pretty thin at first glance as the movie is pretty much the setup with George Bird being a simple working-class man of strong character and principles who's been overly cautious throughout his life while neglecting things like the cultivation of friends and family. Guinness is undeniably the heart of this film as there is a humorous element to seeing George Bird throw caution to the wind with thoughts of the future and societal and cultural expectations placed to the wayside as Bird enters the opulent world of The Regal and his knowledge of how things work on a day-to-day basis serve to humble those of a higher class. In many ways you can see Bird as something of a precursor to other similar characters such as Peter Sellers' iconic Academy Award nominated performance as Chance the Gardener/Chauncey Gardener where the deceptive simplicity of the character is contrasted against the considerably emptier characters who pride themselves on status, prestige, and influence. Guinness is given no shortage of supporting players to play off against with particularly good exchanges coming from head housekeeper Mrs. Poole played by Kay Walsh with the two forming a low key romance that is very endearing, and Sid James is quite entertaining as Joe Clarence. Unfortunately the movie makes a massive mistake in its application of a twist ending that feels like it robs the story of emotional impact and it really seems like it ends on a downer note for no other reason than to catch the audience off guard. I'll admit it's a bold move in terms of an ending but not only does it needlessly turn tragic it leaves a feeling of "so what?" to everything we've seen.

There's a fantastic film for 95% of the running time thanks in no small way to the legendary Alec Guinness as George Bird who we really grow to care about as a likable everyman in an extraordinary set of circumstances. There's some on point social satire involving the contrast of Bird's working class principles against the "view from 20,000 feet" held by those of higher status at The Regal, but the ending they go with detracts from those solid points and takes a story that should be uplifting and turns it rather bitter and cruel.
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