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The Young Mr. Pitt

In 1783 England, King George III appoints William Pitt only 24 years old, as PM. When members of Parliament refuse to take Pitt seriously, he calls for a general election and wins. Pitt works to reform England, focusing on rebuilding the navy while across the sea in France, Napoleon Bonaparte begins his conquest of Europe.

Top Cast

  • Robert Donat

    Robert Donat

    William Pitt / The Earl of Chatham

  • Robert Morley

    Robert Morley

    Charles James Fox

  • Phyllis Calvert

    Phyllis Calvert

    Eleanor Eden

  • John Mills

    John Mills

    William Wilberforce

  • Geoffrey Atkins

    Geoffrey Atkins

    William Pitt, as a boy

  • Jean Cadell

    Jean Cadell

    Mrs. Sparry

  • Raymond Lovell

    Raymond Lovell

    George the Third

  • Agnes Lauchlan

    Agnes Lauchlan

    Queen Charlotte

  • Felix Aylmer

    Felix Aylmer

    Lord North

Overview

In 1783 England, King George III appoints William Pitt only 24 years old, as PM. When members of Parliament refuse to take Pitt seriously, he calls for a general election and wins. Pitt works to reform England, focusing on rebuilding the navy while across the sea in France, Napoleon Bonaparte begins his conquest of Europe.

Rating

6.2 / 10
9 Reviews
1 Popular

1 Reviews

  • CinemaSerf
    CinemaSerf
    6 Jun 26, 2022

    Robert Donat is another of that rare breed of actor who rarely made a duff film - but this rather drudging effort comes pretty close. He portrays William Pitt, who became Prime Minister to King George III at the tender age of just 24, and who had to deal with the fallout from the French Revolution, the Napoleonic Wars and the mysterious illness that afflicted his King. Donat tries hard, but though Pitt was doubtlessly a patriot, he was also relatively charm free - a solitary, almost aloof, figure who makes for quite a difficult part to play with any kind of passion or enthusiasm. Robert Morley fares slightly better as his Whig opponent Charles Fox, he has more of a character to work with - and the best parts of the film are when the two engage in a bit of parliamentary hustings. Despite some decent contributions from Felix Aylmer and Raymond Lovell, John Mills is just a bit too annoying as the effervescent William Wilberforce and much of the time this is little better than an historical chronology in which Donat features all too infrequently, and statically, to inject much life into this biopic.

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