Quartet
Quartet is a 1948 British anthology film with four segments, each based on a story by W. Somerset Maugham. The author appears at the start and end of the movie to introduce the stories and comment about his writing career. It was successful enough to produce two sequels, Trio (1950) and Encore (1951), and popularised the compendium film format, leading to films such as O. Henry's Full House in 1952. The screenplays for the stories were all written by R. C. Sherriff.
Plot
Despite their reservations, Henry Garnet and his wife allow their promising tennis player son, nineteen-year-old Nicky Garnet, to travel by himself to Monte Carlo to compete in a tournament. Mr. Garnet gives him some advice: never gamble, never lend money, and don't have anything to do with women. On the last night of his stay, he disregards all three: he wins a large amount of money at roulette and meets a beautiful woman named Jeanne, who borrows from him before he can react. Later, she repays him, then takes him dancing at a nightclub.
Awards
More details
| author | R. C. Sherriff |
|---|---|
| award | National Board of Review: Top Ten Films |
| director | Arthur Crabtree Harold French Ken Annakin Ralph Smart |
| genre | comedy-drama |
| keywords | beautiful woman clean common common land concert pianist falling in love fly hiding place how to kill listen make up monte carlo morning newlywed paris prison visit prison visitor return home roulette sappho steal tennis player than the win |
| musicBy | John D. H. Greenwood |
| producer | Antony Darnborough |
| productionCompany | Gainsborough Pictures Rank Organisation |
| publisher | General Film Distributors |
| theme | anthology dance |