Saturday Night Cinema: The Million Pound Note (1954)

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Tonight’s Saturday Night Cinema feature is a gem of a film, The Million Pound Note, Mark Twain’s classic story of the penniless American who is given a million-pound bank note in a wager and succeeds in keeping it intact for a month.

Released in the US as Man With a Million, The Million Pound Note is a satisfying adaptation of a satirical short story by Mark Twain. Gregory Peck plays Henry Adams, an impecunious American living by his wits in London. Henry becomes the object of a wager between millionaire brothers Oliver and Roderick Montpelier (Ronald Squire and Wilfred Hyde-White), who want to find out if a man with a million pound note in his bank account could live comfortably for one month on the strength of that note–without ever spending a penny of it. When Henry is given the note and lets it be known that he has it, every courtesy imaginable is extended to him by hoteliers, restauranteurs, etc. Trouble brews when Henry uses the note’s reputation to speculate on the stock market. When his creditors demand that he produce the note as an act of faith, Henry is unable to do so, whereupon pandemonium reigns–and the audience’s laughter cascades. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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knightsstrength
knightsstrength
5 years ago

Good old movie. Like the restaurant part the best with the two elders eating away even after Gregory Peck still has his second meal.

It has caused good meaning to the story, you have heaps of money and you get credit and a name

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Thanks for sharing!