Return to Yesterday (1940) Poster

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6/10
Return to Yesterday
Prismark102 September 2021
Based on a stage play by Robert Morley. Return to Yesterday is a breezy film with a spadeful of charm.

Robert Maine is a Brit who made it big in Hollywood. After a visit to London. Maine suddenly takes a trip to the seaside resort where he previously spent time in repertory theatre and living in crummy digs in order to get his zest for life back.

The local theatre is struggling to put on its new play. The leading man has walked out. The young playwright Peter Thropp is being sabotaged by the producer of the theatre company.

Thropp's girlfriend and leading lady Carol suggests that new boarder, Maine who is there incognito read for the play.

Only the landlady knows who Maine really is. The rest of the cast are blown away by Maine's performance. Soon the rest discover who he really is and the publicity leads to a full house in the opening night. It also leads to Maine having a romantic dalliance with Carol.

The movie has cheeky humour and is very amusing even though the film is over 80 years old.

Maine a veteran finds a new lease of life, he even acknowledges that the young are there to make mistakes. Maybe Carol is too easily swayed by Maine but that would not be unusual given he is a Hollywood star. Thropp is a little too understanding maybe realising that he is no match for a famous name.
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5/10
brooks a bit past it
malcolmgsw28 May 2008
The basic premise of this film is that Clive Brooks is a big Hollywood film star who has returned home for a brief spell .He wants to escape from the pressures of this(don't they all) and ends up in a seaside town where he began his career and decides to help out an end of pier theatre.Even if Brooks had been a star he was now past his sell by date,being 53 when he made this film.So rather an unlikely star.Brooks is his usual wooden self,and the fact that he appeared in such an insignificant film means that he must have accepted that his film career was wending to a close.It passes the team reasonably and its shortness means that it does not outstay its welcome.
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7/10
Surprised they never musicalized this for Fred Astaire.
mark.waltz22 December 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Since the dancing king would spend the 1950's opposite younger women, Astaire would have made an interesting choice in playing Clive Brook's role, going from dramatic actor to musical comedy star, since the lighthearted plot of this amiable comedy is similar to "Daddy Long Legs", "The Belle of New York" and "Funny Face". Obviously Anna Lee's younger character is similar to those played by Leslie Caron, Vera-Ellen and Audrey Hepburn, but it's clear that her small town actress is merely infatuated with Brook, denying that she really loves David Tree. What young girl in a small sea side town with its own small theater would not want to get aquainted with a movie star, even as unlikely as one as Brook?

The future Lila Quartermaine of "General Hospital" is a sweet but frequently feisty delight, not a great beauty, but certainly beautiful and the girl next door. Brook is more lively here than he was in Hollywood films a decade before, but he's still far too long in the tooth for this kind of tole. As the sweet matron of the theater community. Dame May Whitty is a huggable delight. I also liked the art direction, perfect for resembling a seaside town. Good scenes at the beginning show Brook being bothered by fans of all ages and pushy stage mothers, one of them having a bratty child that reminded me of the pre-teen Baby Jane Hudson. Funny and light, and definitely worth catching.
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Breezy and Bittersweet
drednm3 March 2017
The underrated Clive Brook stars as a movie star discontented with his life and yearning for the days of his youth when he had a passion for acting and life. On a whim he disembarks a train and comes upon a struggling group of actors in a seaside town. He gets hired and helps them put on a show. He also falls in love with the leading lady (Anna Lee).

Utterly charming film that clocks in at 70 minutes. Brook is terrific as he gets carried away with his newfound theatrical adventure and love, knowing somehow that reality will catch up with him. He cannot return to yesterday.

Co-stars include May Witty as the old actress, O.B. Clarence as her husband, Elliott Mason as Priskin the acerbic landlady, David Tree as the playwright, Milton Rosmer as the crooked manager, Olga Lindo as his wife, Hartley Power as the American agent, and Mollie Rankin as Christine.

Clive Brook had been in films since 1920 and would cap his film career in 1944 with ON APPROVAL. He would return one last time for a small role in THE LIST OF ADRIAN MESSENGER in 1963. For a while in the early talkie period, Brook rivaled Ronald Colman as the epitome of the urbane British sophisticate.

Based on a play by Robert Morley, this story was filmed several times under its original title GOODNESS, HOW SAD.
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8/10
Early Ealing at its best.
brian-joplin4 February 2014
One of the most charming light comedies to come out of Ealing, and Robert Stevenson's last British film before his flight to Hollywood, 'Return to Yesterday'is a veritable treasure trove of British character actors of the period (including Frank Pettingell, Dame May Witty, O.B. Clarence and Garry Marsh) all ably led by Clive Brook in one of his most sensitive screen performances, and one well up to the heights of his later triumph in 'On Approval'. The film also benefits, however, from a clever script (based on a play by Robert Morley), some nostalgic location shooting at Paddington station and on the GWR main line near Dawlish, and a delightful evocation of British seaside life in the last summer before war took hold. Stevenson's direction is characteristically deft and lends the movie a welcome air of spontaneity. Note, for instance, the last shot of O.B. Clarence and his reaction to being tickled from behind - with many directors, this would have ended up on the cutting room floor. Not so with Stevenson, and this film throughout is imbued with the same sense of fun which he brought to his better-known movies for Disney. Though its story of thwarted love is common enough, 'Return to Yesterday' simmers with a love of film and theatre - and the world which was about to be lost forever in the years of war and the privation which followed it. Call it sentimental if you will - but, once watched, this is a film you'll return to again and again.
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9/10
Well Worth Seeing
jromanbaker4 September 2021
Thanks to a UK film channel I caught up with this good film. It shows many things. About how we age and try to accept it, about the UK just before WW2 and that wonderful experience of end of the pier theatre long since lost. Clive Brook is good as an ageing man falling in love with Anna Lee playing a very youthful actor in the theatre company. Most of the cast will be possibly unknown to the young of this century, but were valued in the first half of the 20th century, and that is a loss in itself, but as the title says you cannot return to yesterday. May Whitty is in the film who was so good in ' The Lady Vanishes ' directed by Alfred Hitchcock and she is excellent here giving Clive Brook some very wise advice about the young, and how ideally the young should be with each other. Well worth seeing for its clarity and its wisdom, and the underrated Robert Stevenson directed. Known for working with Disney, he made before that experience a few gems of cinema, and this is one of them.
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9/10
A delightful early Ealing film
alun-williams19 March 2020
Included as the first film in Volume 11 of the Ealing Studios Rarities Collection I came to this film with low expectations, which were very rapidly surpassed. From the very first scene, in which a young playwright whose first play is to be staged at a seaside theatre is taken down several pegs by the man posting the bill advertising it, the script is as beautifully polished as the accents of the leading characters, and the supporting cast is a delight. There's an enormous sense of fun about the film, though Clive Brook as the jaded British Hollywood star trying to rediscover the secret of his youthful happiness occasionally dampens the mood. Now eighty years old there is also oodles of period charm in various railway and seaside scenes.

If anything lets the film down it's the romantic element of the plot, which is not terribly believable, though I suppose one could make the same criticism of several Shakespeare plays, and whether it's plausible or not without it there would have been no way to set up some of the most entertaining scenes.
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8/10
Youthful Struggles
richardchatten30 December 2021
The personality of Robert Morley is already amply in evidence in this breezy early Michael Balcon production adapted from his 1937 play 'My Goodness, How Sad', drawing upon a season he spent with Sir Frank Benson's company.

Already nostalgic when he wrote it, and doubly so when released in January 1940 evoking pre-war Britain; after over eighty years it now seems even more from another era.
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