Home > Comedy >

Always a Bride

Watch Now

Always a Bride (1954)

June. 04,1954
|
6
|
NR
| Comedy Romance
Watch Now

Set against the glitz and glamour of the French Riviera, this comedy follows the misadventures of a father and daughter con artist team (Ronald Squire and Peggy Cummins) who pose as a married couple and swindle wealthy clients at the region's swankiest resorts. But their scams take on a whole new dimension when daughter Clare falls for a British government bureaucrat (Terence Morgan) who may have a secret or two of his own. [Netflix]

...

Watch Trailer

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Wordiezett
1954/06/04

So much average

More
Actuakers
1954/06/05

One of my all time favorites.

More
Platicsco
1954/06/06

Good story, Not enough for a whole film

More
Deanna
1954/06/07

There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.

More
MartinHafer
1954/06/08

In many ways, this romantic comedy is like the earlier Hollywood film, "The Lady Eve". So, if you like one, you'll likely enjoy the other as well.When the story begins, an old man checks into a swank hotel on the Riviera with a very, very young wife. What the folks in the hotel don't know is that they are NOT married...they are father and daughter and they are hucksters. The plan is for the 'husband' to disappear their first night together and for the poor wronged 'wife' (Peggy Cummins) on her wedding night to stand back and see what happens next. Well, the residents of the hotel were touched by their story and donate a lot of money to her to help her out in her time of need. The problem is that she meets Terence, a particularly nice guy who tries to help her...because she starts falling in love with the guy! What's next for this huckster and his daughter? While the film is never hilarious, it is enjoyable and worth seeing. My only reservation is that movies like these tend to make sociopaths seem cute or likable...and they are, in reality, quite evil.

More
malcolmgsw
1954/06/09

Peggy Cummins and Ronald Squire are a pair of con artists who make a living from fleecing expensive hotels and their guests.Terence Morgan is a very unlikely man from the Treasury looking out for people exceeding their travel allowance.What a surprise when he falls for Cummins.Squires and his assistant Geoffrey Sumner,attempt to sell a hotel to James Hayter using forged documents.Hayter is also a con man and the notes he uses are forged.Squires gets caught by the French police but Morgan and Cummins escape to get married.Unfortunately I didn't laugh once.The script was poor. Morgan is not great at playing comedy.There are some really good British films of the 1950s but this is not one of them.

More
jjghayter
1954/06/10

just thought i would add a piece of film trivia which may or may not be of interest to film buffs!. One of the stars of this film , James Hayter played a character with several children, as he happened to have 5 of his own, they were given tiny parts in one scene where "cash" Dutton is handing out ridiculously large sums of pocket money to the kids. at the end of this scene his character says " don't forget little Herbert" and passes a baby to his wife. as the youngest child at that time and only 5 months old i got my first and only chance at the limelight! i was a source of great satisfaction to my father that i earned 3 guineas! Jonathan Hayter (one of eventually eight Hayter children)

More
Jake
1954/06/11

"Always A Bride" is one of those little-known but delightful comedies from what I have always thought of as the Golden Age of British Comedy (late 40s into the 60s). The entire cast is ingratiating, with that wonderful British character actor Ronald Squire a standout. Terence Morgan, an actor I am not always fond of, has never been more likeable, and Peggy Cummins does her usual efficient job in the role of leading lady. The humour tends towards the subtle and wry rather than the broad, and co-scripter Peter Jones can be seen briefly making the best of a supposed foreign lingo in an early scene. Also appearing briefly as a cab driver is Sebastian Cabot.

More