Doctor Syn | |
---|---|
Directed by | Roy William Neill |
Produced by |
Michael Balcon Edward Black |
Written by | Roger Burford Michael Hogan |
Based on | novel by Russell Thorndike |
Starring |
George Arliss Margaret Lockwood John Loder |
Music by | Hugh Bath Jack Beaver |
Cinematography | Jack E. Cox |
Edited by | R.E. Dearing |
Production
company |
|
Release date
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25 August 1937 (U.K.) 14 November 1937 (U.S.) |
Running time
|
78 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Doctor Syn is a 1937 British black-and-white historical dramatic adventure film, directed by Roy William Neill for Gainsborough Pictures. It stars George Arliss (in his last feature film), Margaret Lockwood, Graham Moffatt and Ronald Shiner. The film is based on the Doctor Syn novels of Russell Thorndike, set in 18th century Kent. The character of Syn and the events at the film's climax were both softened considerably in comparison to Thorndike's original story.
Led by Captain Collyer (Roy Emerton), a detachment of Royal Navy tax and revenue officers arrive in the village of Dymchurch on Romney Marsh. The area is notorious for liquor-smuggling and they are on the trail of the culprits. They find a village of apparently honest, pious and simple folk, looked after benevolently by their philanthropic vicar Doctor Syn (Arliss). Syn is in fact the leader of the smugglers of the parish, using his cover as a man of the cloth to run a profitable ring whose dividends are used to better the lives of the local community. Collyer gradually comes to suspect what is going on, and a series of chases and confrontations takes place across the marshes, in which Syn and the smugglers always narrowly outwit their pursuers. Collyer finally discovers that Syn is none other than the notorious pirate Captain Clegg, thought to have been executed many years earlier. Still one step ahead, Syn destroys all incriminating evidence and he and his men make their escape.
It was the last film George Arliss made under his contract with Gaumont British. "He is a quite good parson and there is virtue even in his smuggling," said Arliss. "I think we can make him quite an amusing character, and the subject is picturesque and dramatic."