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The Planter's Wife (1952 film)

The Planter's Wife
Planter's wife poster.jpg
Original British film poster
Directed by Ken Annakin
Produced by John Stafford
Written by Guy Elmes
Peter Proud
Based on novel by Sidney Charles George
Starring Claudette Colbert
Jack Hawkins
Music by Allan Gray
Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth
Edited by Alfred Roome
Production
company
Pinnacle Productions
Distributed by General Film Distributors (UK)
United Artists (USA)
Release date
18 September 1952 (UK)
26 November 1952 (USA)
Running time
88 min.
Country United Kingdom
Language English

The Planter's Wife is a 1952 British drama film directed by Ken Annakin, and starring Claudette Colbert, Jack Hawkins and Anthony Steel. It is set against the backdrop of the Malayan Emergency and focuses on a rubber planter and his neighbours who are fending off a campaign of sustained attacks by Communist insurgents while also struggling to save their marriage.

The film was retitled Outpost in Malaya in the United States.

During the Malayan Emergency, communist terrorists attack an isolated rubber plantation, killing the manager. This concerns neighbouring planter Jim Frazer, who is struggling to produce rubber under constant attacks. Jim is having domestic difficulties with his American wife Liz, who is planning to take their son Mike to England and not return. British Inspector Hugh Dodson urges Liz to come clean with Jim.

Jim gives a lift to Wan Li, a Chinese man, the uncle of a little servant girl injured in the attack on Jim's neighbour. After Wan Li goes to the police, the communists murder him. Mike is almost bitten by a cobra but a mongoose kills the snake.

A bandit attacks Liz and corners her, but she shoots him with a pistol. Jim takes her home. When she awakes the plantation is under attack. Jim fights off the communists with the help of his friend Nair. Liz decides to stay in Malaya.

The movie was originally known as White Blood. This was the name given to liquid rubber as it is tapped from trees. However the title was criticised by the Colonial Office and overseas distributors because it could be interpreted as referring to racial discrimination, so it was changed to The Planter's Wife.

The film was co-financed by the NFFC.

Director Ken Annakin and a team gathered anecdotes from planters, policemen and soldiers in Malaya and shot second unit sequences there as well as Singapore and Malacca but for safety reasons during the ongoing Emergency, much of the filming was done in Ceylon. The majority of the film was shot in London at Pinewood Studios.


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