Miss Pilgrim's Progress

Miss Pilgrim's Progress

Director: Val Guest

Writer: Val Guest

An exchange factory worker from New Jersey joins a plot to save a village from the Town and Country Planning Act.

82 min Rating: 6/10 Released

Top Cast

Yolande Donlan
Yolande Donlan
Laramie Pilgrim
Jon Pertwee
Jon Pertwee
Postman Perkins
Valentine Dyall
Valentine Dyall
Superintendent

Movie Info

Director: Val Guest

Writer: Val Guest

Production Companies: Angel Productions

Countries: United Kingdom

Similar Movies

Mannequin
Mannequin
1938-01-21
Rosies of the North
Rosies of the North
1999-11-10
A Place in the Sun
A Place in the Sun
1951-06-12
The Lion City
The Lion City
1960-12-06
Dance Hall
Dance Hall
1950-06-08
Hon kom som en vind
Hon kom som en vind
1952-11-26
Intervenors
Intervenors
2022-05-10
Industry Abnormal
Industry Abnormal
2024-05-17
Fake Live
Fake Live
2020-07-24
Finals
Finals
2024-07-14
Work
Work
2024-07-14
Person of the Year
Person of the Year
2024-07-24
Party
Party
2024-07-14

User Reviews

What Others Said

CinemaSerf: Yolanda Donlan is the eponymous "Lar" who arrives in Britain as part of a employee swap. She is to work in a factory and see whether or not she can impart any words of wisdom to the staff and the bosses about American working practices. After a while she becomes aware that the local council has eyes on their town. Citing it's "plumbing" as unsuitable for modern day living, they propose to buy up all the houses and relocate the hitherto villagers to a new town. Initially full of vim and vigour, they - led by her new love interest "Bob' (a rather lacklustre Michael Rennie) are gradually worn down until it falls to their feisty and determined visitor to remind them of Magna Carta - and to enliven and embolden their spirits. At times it's a gently rousing comedy drama with a fun "worm that turns" aspect, but that doesn't quite butter the toast here. There are too many lulls in the plot and the rather pedestrian nature of the stereotypical look at the post war British population - exemplified by Peter Butterworth, Reginald Beckwith and Jon Pertwee rather pigeon-hole the "yokel" hosts and leave the "over there over here" mentality just a bit too prevalent for the film to really thrive. It's not terrible, but I wonder how - if it all - it went down in the USA. Here, it's just a bit too reliant on some lazy and uninspired writing.