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Belles of St. Trinian's on DVD (1954)

Belles of St. Trinian's cover art
Average rating: (71%)
11135151420212
3.5
 
Starring: Beryl Reid | Alistair Sim | George Cole | Alastair Sim | Hermione Baddeley | Joyce Grenfell
Director: Frank Launder
Studio: OPTIMUM HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 87 mins
Certificate: TBC
Genres: Comedy | Drama
Languages: English
Released: 01/01/2007

Brief synopsis of Belles of St. Trinian's

The Headmistress of St. Trinian's, the renowned establishment for the education of young ladies, faces a few problems with her students. The unruly schoolgirls are more interested in men and mischief than homework and hockey. But greater trouble than ever beckons when the arrival at the school of Princess Fatima of Makyad coincides with the return of recently expelled Arabella Fritton, who has kidnap on her mind.

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Rated - 5 starsCharming

A customer from Kent, England , 18/08/2004

Belles of St. Trinian's is the first movie based on the St Trinian's drawings about a school for girls where all the pupils are little devils.

This movie has a timeless charm about it, with fantastic performances from Alastair Sim as both the Headmistress and her twin brother and from Joyce Grenfell, the famous raconteuse. George Cole has a very funny part as a spivalmost 30 years before he played Arthur Daily in Minder.

A classic movie, sadly under-watched and under-valued, you'll be doing yourself a favour by renting it.

Blue Murder at St. Trinian's is the second movie in the quadrilogy and although by no means a classic like the first movie, is still very funny. Returning with the same cast on another adventure. Joyce Grenfell steals the movie.

  17 out of 18 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsGirl Power from the 1950s

A customer from Cardiff, Wales , 19/05/2005

Are the girls of St Trinian's a good advertisement for co-ed state education, a teenage boy's dream world (all those long female legs and stocking tops), a celebration of girl-power or a satirical commentary on the British education system and society at large? The two films on this DVD are the first two of the five films to date about the terrible girl's private school invented by the brilliant cartoonist Ronald Searle. Searle's series of cartoons ended in 1953 when he reported that the girls had destroyed their school in an atomic explosion. The first film appeared in the following year. In 'The Belles of St Trinian's' that famous experimental educationalist, headmistress Millicent Fritton (Alastair Sim), discovering that her school is bankrupt, bets the remaining school cash on a racehorse belonging to the father of one of the fourth-form girls (year 10 in modern terms), which the girls assure her is a dead cert. to win the Cheltenham Gold Cup. However, her brother Clarence (also played by Alastair Sim) has his own horse running in that race and is determined to go to any length to ensure it wins. His daughter Bella, in St Trinian's sixth form, enlists her co-students to help her father, resulting in kidnap and battle in the corridors of the school. The film also introduces George Cole as Flash Harry the spiv who does business for the schoolgirls, Mr Basset (Richard Wattis) as the long-suffering official at the Ministry of Education, and the interminable romance between Police Sergeant Ruby Gates (Joyce Grenfell) and her 'Sammy', the Chief Inspector of Barchester Police. The plot of 'Blue Murder at St Trinian's' is more complex, but my teenage son and I think this film is the funnier of the two: there are some lovely moments of humour and satire and we see more of the girls' methods of operation. Millicent Fritton is in prison, the school staff have resigned and the army has moved in to protect the public from the girls of St Trinian's. Meanwhile Flash Harry, who runs St Trinian's marriage bureau for the sixth-form girls, has arranged for the entire sixth form to go to Italy to meet a highly eligible Italian prince. By pulling a few strings he and the girls manage to win a UNESCO competition that will enable them to travel to Italy. But without a headmistress they can't go ... until the father of one of the sixth-formers turns up, on the run from the police. The film also stars Richard Wattis, Eric Barker and Peter Jones (later famous as the voice of 'the book' from 'The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy') as the suffering Min. of Ed. officals, Joyce Grenfell as Ruby Gates, assigned to accompany the schoolgirls in her hunt for the wanted criminal, Terry-Thomas as the owner of the Dreadnought Bus Company that transports the girls to Italy, and Sabrina as the School Swot.

  6 out of 6 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsGreat nostalgic fun

A customer from Kent, England , 07/04/2005

Belles of S.T. didn't seem quite as good as us oldies had remembered, but Blue Murder was much better, and the children enjoyed that more. Good to see these old films again

  4 out of 4 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsUNDER-VALUED great movies

A customer from Woking UK , 06/04/2005

Both movies are timeless classics !!!

Certainly a must see for all ages !

  2 out of 2 people found this review helpful
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