The Man in the White Suit
The Man in the White Suit is a 1951 British satirical science fiction comedy film made by Ealing Studios. It stars Alec Guinness, Joan Greenwood and Cecil Parker and was directed by Alexander Mackendrick. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Writing (Screenplay) for Roger MacDougall, John Dighton and Alexander Mackendrick.
Plot
Sidney Stratton, a gifted research chemist and former Cambridge scholar, is obsessed with developing a fibre that never wears out and resists dirt. His fixation and insistence on costly laboratory facilities lead to repeated dismissals from jobs at several textile mills across Northern England. At Birnley Mills, where he is employed as a labourer, Stratton secretly gains access to research equipment and, through persistence, succeeds in producing a revolutionary synthetic fibre. A suit is tailored from the material: it is brilliantly white, as it cannot absorb dye, and faintly luminous due to traces of radioactive compounds in its structure.
More details
| author | Alexander Mackendrick John Dighton Roger MacDougall |
|---|---|
| contentLocation | Manchester |
| director | Alexander Mackendrick |
| editor | Bernard Gribble |
| genre | comedy science fiction |
| keywords | belong cambridge chemist clothe gift morning northern england obsess radioactive radioactivity textile mill unemployed university of cambridge white suit |
| musicBy | Benjamin Frankel |
| nomination | Academy Award for Best Writing, Adapted Screenplay |
| producer | Michael Balcon |
| productionCompany | Ealing Studios |
| publisher | General Film Distributors |
| theme | fashion satirical |