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A Cry from the Streets

Bittersweet story about London's unwanted children and the good people trying to help them. Ann is a social worker, while Bill is an electrician whose contract with the local care home introduces him to the children and Ann. Events start to escalate out of control when a child takes possession of a loaded gun.

Top Cast

  • Barbara Murray

    Barbara Murray

    Ann Fairlie

  • Max Bygraves

    Max Bygraves

    William "Bill" David Lowther

  • Dana Wilson

    Dana Wilson

    Barbie Taylor

  • Colin Petersen

    Colin Petersen

    Georgie May

  • Kathleen Harrison

    Kathleen Harrison

    Mrs. Farrer

  • Sean Barrett

    Sean Barrett

    Don Farrer

  • Mona Washbourne

    Mona Washbourne

    Mrs. Daniels

  • Eleanor Summerfield

    Eleanor Summerfield

    Gloria May

  • Toke Townley

    Toke Townley

    Mr. Daniels

Overview

Bittersweet story about London's unwanted children and the good people trying to help them. Ann is a social worker, while Bill is an electrician whose contract with the local care home introduces him to the children and Ann. Events start to escalate out of control when a child takes possession of a loaded gun.

Rating

7.1 / 10
8 Reviews
0 Popular

1 Reviews

  • CinemaSerf
    CinemaSerf
    6 Mar 27, 2022

    This got a BAFTA nod for Best British Screenplay and you can easily see why. It is a gentle, almost nostalgic, reminder of how different society was in the UK 60 years ago. Barbara Murray ("Ann") is a social worker struggling to look after a collection of kids from a variety of disadvantaged backgrounds. She meets and falls for the kind, gentle, real-life crooner Max Bygraves ("Bill") who has some fairly traumatic baggage of his own, and they both set about trying to bring a little happiness to themselves and to their young charges. This doesn't pull it's punches - not that it is gory, or visually violent - but it does tackle the topics of suicide, child neglect and parental (& official) indifference in quite a forthright (for 1958) fashion. It did remind me a little of my own childhood in Glasgow in the 1970s - kids were packed off "out to play" on spare ground - frequently that bombed out during WWII - on their own for days at a time; surrounded by an environment of cigarettes and alcohol - and although impossible to reconcile with attitudes today; people just didn't know any better and very, very few of us were ever at risk of anything more dangerous than a skint knee. The kids' performances are good as is Mona Washbourne as "Mrs. Daniels".

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