The Girl Was Young


1h 10m 1938
The Girl Was Young

Brief Synopsis

A young girl helps an innocent man escape the law when he's framed for murder.

Film Details

Also Known As
Young and Innocent
Genre
Suspense/Mystery
Crime
Drama
Thriller
Release Date
Feb 17, 1938
Premiere Information
London opening: Nov 1937
Production Company
Gaumont-British Picture Corp.
Distribution Company
Gaumont-British Picture Corp. of America
Country
Great Britain and United States
Location
Great Britain
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel A Shilling for Candles: The Story of a Crime by Josephine Tey (London, 1936).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 10m
Sound
Mono (Western Electric Sound System)
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
7,569ft

Synopsis

Robert Tisdall is falsely accused of murder when he discovers the dead body of a female film star. He escapes the police and enlists the help of Erica Burgoyne, the young daughter of the chief constable, in helping to prove his innocence.

Film Details

Also Known As
Young and Innocent
Genre
Suspense/Mystery
Crime
Drama
Thriller
Release Date
Feb 17, 1938
Premiere Information
London opening: Nov 1937
Production Company
Gaumont-British Picture Corp.
Distribution Company
Gaumont-British Picture Corp. of America
Country
Great Britain and United States
Location
Great Britain
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel A Shilling for Candles: The Story of a Crime by Josephine Tey (London, 1936).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 10m
Sound
Mono (Western Electric Sound System)
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
7,569ft

Articles

Young and Innocent (aka The Girl Was Young) - Young and Innocent


In one of the more striking opening sequences in Alfred Hitchcock's entire filmography, a man and woman argue violently in a cliff-top mansion above the sea as a storm is brewing. A quick fade to the following morning reveals the lifeless body of a woman in the surf and the murder weapon nearby - a raincoat belt. A man walking along the dunes is the first person to find the victim and runs to get help. Two women on the beach also discover the body and see the man fleeing the crime scene, assuming the worst. When he returns with the police, he is fingered as the murderer and taken into custody, followed by a montage of newspaper headlines. All of this is accomplished in a brilliantly edited sequence of less than five minutes that not only sets the narrative of Young and Innocent (1937) in motion but could also serve as a textbook example of Hitchcock's storyboard approach to moviemaking.

Robert Tisdall (Derrick De Marney), the unlucky suspect in this film, is a typical Hitchcock protagonist. An ordinary man thrown into extraordinary circumstances, not unlike the Robert Donat character in The 39 Steps (1935) or Robert Cummings in Saboteur (1942), Robert goes on the lam, implicating a young woman, the daughter of a police inspector, in his escape. Yet the film is less about the capture of the real murderer than it is about the slowly evolving relationship of the young couple as they move from mutual suspicion to romantic infatuation. The tone is light, droll and upbeat; suspense is often sacrificed for scenes of comic slapstick (a barroom brawl) or eccentric charm (a family dinner with the distressed heroine). It was a complete departure from Hitchcock's dark, brooding previous film, Sabotage (aka A Woman Alone, 1936), but it is also one of his most overlooked and enjoyable thrillers. While it is true that Young and Innocent lacks the perfect mixture of romance, black comedy and suspense that Hitchcock would later perfect in North by Northwest (1959), it is a treat for any Hitchcock fan and full of evocative moments that look ahead to such future Hitchcock films as The Birds (1963) with its startling close-up of seagulls in flight to a morbid description of rooks pecking at a man's eyes.

Based on the mystery novel A Shilling for Candles by Scottish author Elizabeth Mackintosh (using the pseudonym Josephine Tey), Young and Innocent was worked on by several screenwriters including Charles Bennett, Alma Reville (Hitchcock's wife), Anthony Armstrong, Edwin Greenwood and Gerald Savory; Joan Harrison, one of his future collaborators, worked as script consultant. Many details from the original novel were altered - the hero's profession was changed from unemployed waiter to unproduced screenwriter, the Scotland Yard detective became a minor character - and new scenes were added including a children's party and the climactic capture of the real killer in a hotel ballroom. In the final script, the solving of the crime was of secondary importance to the romance between Robert and Erica, played by eighteen-year-old Nova Pilbeam. This was Ms. Pilbeam's first major adult role although she had previously worked with Hitchcock as the young kidnapping victim in his first version of The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934).

The making of the film was a happy experience for Hitchcock even though he was plagued with poor health at times. Leading man Derrick De Marney recalled, "Hitchcock's eyes on the set are generally closed. He's been known to take cat-naps even during shooting. Nova Pilbeam was acting with me in her first romantic role. Hitchcock rushed us through one scene at express train tempo. When we had finished, Hitchcock, who had appeared to be snoozing contentedly, opened his eyes with difficulty and consulted his watch. 'Too slow," he murmured. 'I had that scene marked for thirty seconds and it took you fifty seconds. We'll have to retake.' Hitch was using a stop-watch!" (from The Dark Side of Genius: The Life of Alfred Hitchcock by Donald Spoto).

In one of the film's most striking scenes, a car carrying Robert, Erica and a tramp who can identify the killer, crashes through the floor of an abandoned mine. Robert attempts to rescue Erica who is frantically reaching for his hand as the car is balanced on the edge of a precipice. "I was terrified," recalled Pilbeam. "But Hitch had this quirky sense of humor and made that scene go on and on, so that I thought my arm would come out of its socket." (from Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light by Patrick McGilligan). Hitchcock would later work variations on this rescue attempt in Saboteur and North by Northwest.

The recurring theme of characters fumbling blindly with their predicament is reinforced throughout Young and Innocent. "The party," Hitchcock said years later, "was designed as a deliberate symbol - in fact it was the clue to the whole film, but no one got it at the time, and in the American-release prints [titled The Girl Was Young] the sequence was omitted because they thought it slowed down the pace of the picture!" (from The Dark Side of Genius: The Life of Alfred Hitchcock by Donald Spoto).

Of all the technically challenging shots in the film, the final unmasking of the killer on the bandstand is probably the most impressive. In an interview with Francois Truffaut, the director recalled, "I place the camera in the highest position, above the hotel lounge, next to the ceiling, and we dolly it down, right through the lobby, into the big ballroom, and past the dancers, the bandstand, and the musicians, right up to a close-up of the drummer. The musicians are all in blackface, and we stay on the drummer's face until his eyes fill the screen. And then, the eyes twitch [a clue to the killer's identity]. The whole thing was done in one shot."

Young and Innocent was a modest success for the director and is now regarded by most Hitchcock scholars as merely a warm-up for his next picture, The Lady Vanishes (1938). For those counting every Hitchcock cameo, you can spot him in this film as a photographer standing outside a courthouse, fussing with his camera. And there are other amusing bits to discover if you watch closely. In the railyard scene where Robert and Erica have hidden their car, the approaching locomotive is clearly a toy train, the sets are miniature and a brief overhead shot of the couple clearly reveals them to be lifeless dolls.

Producer: Edward Black
Director: Alfred Hitchcock
Screenplay: Josephine Tey (novel), Charles Bennett, Edwin Greenwood, Anthony Armstrong, Gerald Savory
Cinematography: Bernard Knowles
Film Editing: Charles Frend
Art Direction: Alfred Junge
Music: Al Goodhart, Al Hoffman, Samuel Lerner, Jack Beaver, Louis Levy
Cast: Nova Pilbeam (Erica Burgoyne), Derrick De Marney (Robert Tisdall), Percy Marmont (Col. Burgoyne), Edward Rigby (Old Will), Mary Clare (Erica's Aunt Margaret), John Longden (Det. Insp. Kent).
BW-80m.

by Jeff Stafford
Young And Innocent (Aka The Girl Was Young) - Young And Innocent

Young and Innocent (aka The Girl Was Young) - Young and Innocent

In one of the more striking opening sequences in Alfred Hitchcock's entire filmography, a man and woman argue violently in a cliff-top mansion above the sea as a storm is brewing. A quick fade to the following morning reveals the lifeless body of a woman in the surf and the murder weapon nearby - a raincoat belt. A man walking along the dunes is the first person to find the victim and runs to get help. Two women on the beach also discover the body and see the man fleeing the crime scene, assuming the worst. When he returns with the police, he is fingered as the murderer and taken into custody, followed by a montage of newspaper headlines. All of this is accomplished in a brilliantly edited sequence of less than five minutes that not only sets the narrative of Young and Innocent (1937) in motion but could also serve as a textbook example of Hitchcock's storyboard approach to moviemaking. Robert Tisdall (Derrick De Marney), the unlucky suspect in this film, is a typical Hitchcock protagonist. An ordinary man thrown into extraordinary circumstances, not unlike the Robert Donat character in The 39 Steps (1935) or Robert Cummings in Saboteur (1942), Robert goes on the lam, implicating a young woman, the daughter of a police inspector, in his escape. Yet the film is less about the capture of the real murderer than it is about the slowly evolving relationship of the young couple as they move from mutual suspicion to romantic infatuation. The tone is light, droll and upbeat; suspense is often sacrificed for scenes of comic slapstick (a barroom brawl) or eccentric charm (a family dinner with the distressed heroine). It was a complete departure from Hitchcock's dark, brooding previous film, Sabotage (aka A Woman Alone, 1936), but it is also one of his most overlooked and enjoyable thrillers. While it is true that Young and Innocent lacks the perfect mixture of romance, black comedy and suspense that Hitchcock would later perfect in North by Northwest (1959), it is a treat for any Hitchcock fan and full of evocative moments that look ahead to such future Hitchcock films as The Birds (1963) with its startling close-up of seagulls in flight to a morbid description of rooks pecking at a man's eyes. Based on the mystery novel A Shilling for Candles by Scottish author Elizabeth Mackintosh (using the pseudonym Josephine Tey), Young and Innocent was worked on by several screenwriters including Charles Bennett, Alma Reville (Hitchcock's wife), Anthony Armstrong, Edwin Greenwood and Gerald Savory; Joan Harrison, one of his future collaborators, worked as script consultant. Many details from the original novel were altered - the hero's profession was changed from unemployed waiter to unproduced screenwriter, the Scotland Yard detective became a minor character - and new scenes were added including a children's party and the climactic capture of the real killer in a hotel ballroom. In the final script, the solving of the crime was of secondary importance to the romance between Robert and Erica, played by eighteen-year-old Nova Pilbeam. This was Ms. Pilbeam's first major adult role although she had previously worked with Hitchcock as the young kidnapping victim in his first version of The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934). The making of the film was a happy experience for Hitchcock even though he was plagued with poor health at times. Leading man Derrick De Marney recalled, "Hitchcock's eyes on the set are generally closed. He's been known to take cat-naps even during shooting. Nova Pilbeam was acting with me in her first romantic role. Hitchcock rushed us through one scene at express train tempo. When we had finished, Hitchcock, who had appeared to be snoozing contentedly, opened his eyes with difficulty and consulted his watch. 'Too slow," he murmured. 'I had that scene marked for thirty seconds and it took you fifty seconds. We'll have to retake.' Hitch was using a stop-watch!" (from The Dark Side of Genius: The Life of Alfred Hitchcock by Donald Spoto). In one of the film's most striking scenes, a car carrying Robert, Erica and a tramp who can identify the killer, crashes through the floor of an abandoned mine. Robert attempts to rescue Erica who is frantically reaching for his hand as the car is balanced on the edge of a precipice. "I was terrified," recalled Pilbeam. "But Hitch had this quirky sense of humor and made that scene go on and on, so that I thought my arm would come out of its socket." (from Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light by Patrick McGilligan). Hitchcock would later work variations on this rescue attempt in Saboteur and North by Northwest. The recurring theme of characters fumbling blindly with their predicament is reinforced throughout Young and Innocent. "The party," Hitchcock said years later, "was designed as a deliberate symbol - in fact it was the clue to the whole film, but no one got it at the time, and in the American-release prints [titled The Girl Was Young] the sequence was omitted because they thought it slowed down the pace of the picture!" (from The Dark Side of Genius: The Life of Alfred Hitchcock by Donald Spoto). Of all the technically challenging shots in the film, the final unmasking of the killer on the bandstand is probably the most impressive. In an interview with Francois Truffaut, the director recalled, "I place the camera in the highest position, above the hotel lounge, next to the ceiling, and we dolly it down, right through the lobby, into the big ballroom, and past the dancers, the bandstand, and the musicians, right up to a close-up of the drummer. The musicians are all in blackface, and we stay on the drummer's face until his eyes fill the screen. And then, the eyes twitch [a clue to the killer's identity]. The whole thing was done in one shot." Young and Innocent was a modest success for the director and is now regarded by most Hitchcock scholars as merely a warm-up for his next picture, The Lady Vanishes (1938). For those counting every Hitchcock cameo, you can spot him in this film as a photographer standing outside a courthouse, fussing with his camera. And there are other amusing bits to discover if you watch closely. In the railyard scene where Robert and Erica have hidden their car, the approaching locomotive is clearly a toy train, the sets are miniature and a brief overhead shot of the couple clearly reveals them to be lifeless dolls. Producer: Edward Black Director: Alfred Hitchcock Screenplay: Josephine Tey (novel), Charles Bennett, Edwin Greenwood, Anthony Armstrong, Gerald Savory Cinematography: Bernard Knowles Film Editing: Charles Frend Art Direction: Alfred Junge Music: Al Goodhart, Al Hoffman, Samuel Lerner, Jack Beaver, Louis Levy Cast: Nova Pilbeam (Erica Burgoyne), Derrick De Marney (Robert Tisdall), Percy Marmont (Col. Burgoyne), Edward Rigby (Old Will), Mary Clare (Erica's Aunt Margaret), John Longden (Det. Insp. Kent). BW-80m. by Jeff Stafford

Quotes

Trivia

outside the courthouse holding a camera as Derrick de Marney escapes.

Notes

The film was released in Great Britain by General Film Distributors, Ltd. under its original title Young and Innocent. Modern sources include Producer Edward Black in the production.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Winter January 1, 1937

Re-released in United States on Video September 24, 1996

Released in United States Winter January 1, 1937

Re-released in United States on Video September 24, 1996