The Man in the Sky
The Man in the Sky (released in the U.S. as Decision Against Time) is a 1957 thriller drama film starring Jack Hawkins and produced by Ealing Films, Michael Balcon's new company, set up after Rank had sold Ealing Studios in Ealing Green, West London, to the BBC in 1955. Balcon, who had run the company on behalf of Rank since 1944, left Rank in 1956 and set up the new company, striking a distribution and production deal with MGM. This was the first Ealing production to be made at MGM-British Studios in Borehamwood, North London.
The Man in the Sky | |
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Original UK quad format film poster | |
Directed by | Charles Crichton |
Produced by | Michael Balcon |
Screenplay by | John Eldridge William Rose |
Story by | William Rose |
Starring | Jack Hawkins Elizabeth Sellars |
Music by | Gerard Schurmann |
Cinematography | Douglas Slocombe |
Edited by | Peter Tanner |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date |
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Running time | 86 minutes[2] |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | $486,000[3] |
Box office | $500,000[3] |
Plot
Test pilot John Mitchell (Jack Hawkins) disappoints his wife Mary (Elizabeth Sellars) by refusing to increase their unsuccessful bid for a house. What she does not know is that the aircraft manufacturing company he works for is in desperate financial straits. Owner Reginald Conway (Walter Fitzgerald) needs to convince Ashmore (Eddie Byrne) to place an order soon or the firm will go bankrupt. Mitchell takes the only prototype of a new aeroplane for a flight, with Ashmore and several others aboard. During testing, one engine catches fire.
Ashmore and the others parachute to safety. Mitchell is able to extinguish the fire by diving the aeroplane, but loses half of his aileron control in the process. Then, despite Conway's order and the urgings of others, he decides to try to land the aeroplane rather than crashing it into the sea. However, he has to fly back and forth for half an hour to use up fuel, shifting the centre of gravity in the aircraft away from the dead engine to make the landing more feasible. Ashmore is convinced of the aircraft's value by its performance in the dive and expresses confidence in Mitchell's ability to land it.
During the tense wait, after all the others have rejected the idea as serving no purpose, office worker Mrs Snowden (Megs Jenkins) takes it upon herself to notify Mitchell's wife by phone, anyway. Mary goes to the airfield and watches as her husband manages to land safely. Later, at home, she demands to know why he risked his life when everyone told him to bail out. He explains that while he felt it was his duty with the company's fate hanging in the balance, he took the risk out of love and concern for the welfare of his family. Then he phones the estate agent and agrees to the seller's price of the house mentioned earlier.
Cast
- Jack Hawkins as John Mitchell
- Elizabeth Sellars as Mary Mitchell
- Jeremy Bodkin as Nicholas Mitchell, John's young son
- Gerard Lohan as Philip Mitchell, John's other young son
- Walter Fitzgerald as Reginald Conway
- John Stratton as Peter Hook
- Eddie Byrne as Ashmore
- Victor Maddern as Joe Biggs
- Lionel Jeffries as Keith
- Donald Pleasence as Crabtree
- Catherine Lacey as Mary's Mother
- Megs Jenkins as Mrs Snowden
- Ernest Clark as Maine
- Raymond Francis as Jenkins
- Russell Waters as Sim
Production
Much of the filming of The Man in the Sky was done at Pendeford airfield near Wolverhampton. The aircraft portraying the "Wolverhampton Freighter" was Bristol 170 Wayfarer Mk.IIA G-AIFV of Silver City Airways, a type that had actually been flying since 1946. During filming, the aircraft overshot the runway, damaging the nose and wing. After filming, the aircraft returned to service with Silver City Airways until May 1962, when it was scrapped.[4][N 1]
Reception
The Man in the Sky premiered in London at the Empire, Leicester Square on 24 January 1957,[1] and the reviewer for The Times called it "an Ealing film with a difference".[5] According to MGM records, The Man in the Sky earned $150,000 in the US and Canada and $350,000 elsewhere.[3]
Aviation film historian Stephen Pendo in Aviation in the Cinema (1985) considered The Man in the Sky as part of the lineage of the "test pilot-hero" films of the 1950s.[6] Aviation film historian Michael Paris in From the Wright Brothers to Top Gun: Aviation, Nationalism, and Popular Cinema (1995) shared a similar perspective on the film.[7]
See also
References
Notes
- Bristol Freighter 170 Mk.31 also appeared in the film.[4]
Citations
- "Picture Theatres, Empire, The Man in the Sky". The Times, 24 January 1957, page 2, first column. Retrieved: 29 August 2015.
- "Runtime: 'The Man in the Sky'." BBFC, 2019. Retrieved: 11 June 2019.
- "The Eddie Mannix Ledger." Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study (Los Angeles), 2019.
- Santoir, Christian. "Flames in the Sky: 'The Man in the Sky'." Aeromovies, 26 November 2011. Retrieved: 11 June 2019.
- ". The Times, 28 January 1957, p. 12. Retrieved: 29 August 2015.
- Pendo 1985, p. 26.
- Paris 1995, p. 200.