| Time Flies | |
|---|---|
![]() Opening title  | |
| Directed by | Walter Forde | 
| Screenplay by | J.O.C. Orton Ted Kavanagh Howard Irving Young  | 
| Produced by | Edward Black | 
| Starring | Tommy Handley Evelyn Dall George Moon  | 
| Cinematography | Basil Emmott | 
| Edited by | R. E. Dearing | 
| Music by | Bretton Byrd | 
Production company  | |
| Distributed by | General Film Distributors (UK) | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 88 minutes | 
| Country | United Kingdom | 
| Language | English | 
Time Flies is a 1944 British comedy film directed by Walter Forde and starring Tommy Handley, Evelyn Dall, Felix Aylmer and Moore Marriott.[1] The screenplay concerns two music hall performers, an inventor and a con-man who travel back to Elizabethan times using a time machine.[2]
Plot
A professor invents a time sphere which takes a group of 1940s entertainers to Elizabethan London, where they encounter Queen Elizabeth and Sir Walter Raleigh and introduce them to jazz culture.
They also meet Captain John Smith and a very heavy-drinking Pocahontas. The main female character meets William Shakespeare and feeds him some of his own lines, which he eagerly writes down.
A costume-production, (many of which are immaculate), which makes extensive use of the Gainsborough wardrobe.
Cast
- Tommy Handley – Tommy
 - Evelyn Dall – Susie Barton
 - George Moon – Bill Barton
 - Felix Aylmer – The Professor
 - Moore Marriott – A Soothsayer
 - Graham Moffatt – His Nephew
 - John Salew – William Shakespeare
 - Leslie Bradley – Captain Walter Raleigh
 - Olga Lindo – Queen Elizabeth
 - Roy Emerton – Captain John Smith
 - Iris Lang – Princess Pocahontas
 - Stéphane Grappelli – A Troubadour
 
Critical reception
Sky Cinema gave the film two out of five stars, its review stating: "Despite the subject and the cast, the treatment lacks vivacity".[3] TV Guide rated it similarly: "A well-tuned script takes full advantages of the possibilities for comedy, but radio star Handley is a bit of a disappointment, looking sourly out of place on the screen";[4] The Radio Times rated it three out of five stars, concluding: "Some of the jokes have travelled less well and it falls flat in places, but it's a thoroughly entertaining romp".[5]
References
External links
- Time Flies at IMDb
 
.jpg.webp)