*** Welcome to piglix ***

The Black Sheep of Whitehall

The Black Sheep of Whitehall
The Black Sheep of Whitehall UK quad poster.jpg
Original British quad format film poster
Directed by Basil Dearden
Will Hay
Produced by Michael Balcon
Written by John Dighton
Angus MacPhail
Starring Will Hay
John Mills
Basil Sydney
Henry Hewitt
Felix Aylmer
Cinematography Eric Cross
Günther Krampf
Edited by Ray Pitt
Production
company
Distributed by United Artists (UK)
Release date
  • 8 January 1942 (1942-01-08) (UK )
Running time
80 min.
Country United Kingdom
Language English

The Black Sheep of Whitehall is a 1942 British black-and-white comedy war film, directed by Will Hay and Basil Dearden, and starring Will Hay, John Mills and Basil Sydney. It was produced by Michael Balcon and Ealing Studios.

When he is forced to vacate the office of his debt-ridden correspondence college, 'Professor' Will Davis (Will Hay) goes to the Ministry of International Commerce at Whitehall in order to confront his one-and-only student, PR man Bobby Jessop (John Mills). To get Davis off his back, Jessop proposes to get him a job at Whitehall. Jessop then leaves in order to fetch a Professor Davys at the railway station. The professor is a leading economist who has returned from a long stay in South America in order to advise the British government on a trade treaty with the South American nations, which could be crucial to Britain's war effort.

Davis is mistaken for the expert and gets involved in a series of interviews, giving answers based on gambling, con jobs, double entendres or just plain ignorance. These scenes are very funny and are made more so by the reactions of an increasingly incredulous Joss Ambler as government minister 'Sir John'. Jessop later returns with 'Professor Davys' and the confusion is sorted out, though it has left the BBC interviewers in a state of mental collapse. Jessop then discovers that the man he brought with him is in fact Crabtree (Felix Aylmer), a member of a group of fifth columnists working for Nazi Germany.


...
Wikipedia

...