Celia (1949) Poster

(1949)

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6/10
A early budget Hammer thriller
new_market418 February 2011
Celia (Hy Hazel), an attractive but hard-up actress, has a passion for expensive hats. She is offered the chance to earn some money to buy one by her friend Larry who runs a detective agency. His clients Mr and Mrs Haldane were concerned for their rich Aunt Nora, having had no contact from her. The Haldanes had visited Nora's country house only to be told by her new, younger husband Lester (John Bailey) that she was ill and did not wish to see them. Celia reluctantly agrees to infiltrate the house by posing as a replacement housekeeper.

'Celia' was one of the earliest films made by Hammer Film Productions on behalf of Exclusive Films. This small company ran on a shoestring and started out by making films of successful BBC radio programmes such as the legendary Dick Barton. It is hard to imagine a more budget budget-film than this one. All the interior shots were made entirely within a country mansion in Cookham, Berkshire, specially hired by the company for around £25 a week (1949 prices) with almost every room as well as gardens being used for shooting – and it shows. In fact, the star Hy Hazell happily lived in the mansion during shooting and so saved hotel costs. The entire film cost about £13,000. (The same mansion was used in the making of 'Doctor Morelle – The Case of the Missing Heiress' – released in June 1949). Miss Hazel gives an enjoyable performance opposite the creepy John Bailey.
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5/10
All For a Hat
boblipton22 June 2017
Celia is Hy Hazell. an out-of-work actress. She is inveigled by Bruce Lester, a private investigator, into an undercover job. It seems that Elsie Wagstaff has married John Bailey and has cut off communications with her niece and nephews, who are worried that Bailey intends nefarious doings. As the movie goes on, the audience discovers that this is indeed the case; in cooperation with Lockwood West, Bailey intends to drug the old woman and throw her off the balcony, having told the gossips in the village that his wife walks in her sleep. Can Miss Hazell and Mr. Lester save the old woman?

This is a perfectly decent thriller bookended by some light-hearted banter If not exactly a world-beater, it is a perfectly pleasant time-waster for anyone who likes a bit of chills in a country home.
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6/10
"I tell you it's getting dangerous"
hwg1957-102-26570416 May 2021
Warning: Spoilers
It's not a very original story and is mostly confined to one house but it ticks along nicely .The main attraction is Hy Hazell as Celia who is totally charming. She brings liveliness and humour to her role that outshines the other actors. It surprises me that Ms. Hazell was never a bigger star as she was more entertaining and interesting than a a lot of her leading lady contemporaries. But then the world of cinema has always been full of potentials that were never fulfilled. Also in the cast is Joan Hickson who is always a pleasure to see.

The ending is a bit bizarre where the wife who was rescued from being killed by her younger husband for her money is again seen with a younger man, obviously out for her money too, leaving the private detective to comment they may have to rescue her again. Aunt Nora will never learn!
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7/10
Don't be gaslit by love from a stranger
mark.waltz9 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
The elderly Elsie Wagstaff has married a much younger man (Rex Harrison lookalike John Bailey) and is kept away from her family, certain that he's up to no good. With the help of a doctor he's blackmailing, Bailey is desperate to do the poor fragile old thing in. A private detective hired by the family convinces his former girlfriend, out of work actress Hy Hazell, to pose as a temporary servant to check in on the sweet old lady and indeed it is obvious that there is sinister activity in the air, all for the promise of an estate that probably doesn't have much in it.

The pathetic looking Aunt Nora is indeed one of the most fragile of the movie women in jeopardy, much like the spinster in the various film versions of "Kind Lady", the old lady in "Night Must Fall" and Norma Varden's vulnerable widow in "Witness For the Prosecution". She's far from able to defend herself and in complete denial of Baldwin's intentions. That makes her all the more someone for the audience to root for her because she does look like someone's ailing old grandmother. This film is very suspenseful yet predictable, with lots of twists along the way in its short running time. Not quite a gothic melodrama, but certainly a nail biter.
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5/10
Aunt Nora is an idiot
AAdaSC10 July 2018
Detective Bruce Lester (Larry) calls on the help of friend Hy Hazell (Celia) to help him discover what has happened to Elsie Wagstaff (Aunt Nora). She goes undercover as a housemaid in the country house in which Wagstaff is hidden away and young husband John Bailey (Lester) seems to be scheming up some evilness.

It's a short film and it keeps you watching for the duration. There are no surprises and Hy Hazell carries the film along with her enthusiasm. It takes a bit of a while to get going and it's ok while it lasts. It's a comedy so there is never really any real threat to anyone's life although the film does succeed in delivering some tension, eg, hiding in the bedroom.

Of more interest is reading about Hy Hazell and the way she died in real life. She choked on a steak whilst eating at a Westminster restaurant at the age of 50. I want to know more. It's more interesting than the film.
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8/10
A great little thriller.
spottedowl6 September 2009
Celia, played by the delicious Hy Hazell, is co-opted by her private eye boyfriend to pose as a servant girl to infiltrate a household where he suspects there is a murder being planned. The reason for this intended crime is never made clear but certainly appears to be well advanced.

The intended victim's husband is in league with another person who is posing as a doctor to keep the woman, Aunt Nora, in a sedated state.

Another typical British B offering that was churned out in great numbers in the period.

A well paced thriller that will hold your interest throughout.

8/ 10.
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5/10
A housebound mystery
Leofwine_draca14 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
CELIA is a very low budget early production from Hammer Films and their popular director Francis Searle. The story, which is more than a little unbelievable, is about a struggling out-of-work actress who is tasked with going undercover as a housekeeper to investigate a mystery in a country house: an ailing woman is kept locked in her bedroom, refusing to meet with her concerned extended family members. The story that follows plods a little but has a sufficient air of mystery to be worth a viewing. There's a lack of engaging actors here but things do pick up during the latter stages, building to an inevitable but satisfying climax.
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8/10
Good to see the ladies fashions when I was 3 years old
howardmorley25 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
The above reviews have already adequately outlined the basic plot, without giving the dreaded spoiler, in this comedy thriller from Hammer films produced very much tongue-in-cheek.What remains is to comment on the time and tide of Britain in 1949 when this film was produced.

In Britain then rationing was still very much in force, high taxation to pay off the war debt and the £50 earned by Hy Hazell's character was a genuine large sum of money.Ladies wore skirts below the knee and wore hats in company.I noticed in the film credits there were no less than two people who contributed millinery to the film production.I was only 3 when this film was produced but the ladies fashions depicted are documented in our family movies which my father made of my late mother (33 at the time) and other female relatives.Hope these few lines have given a flavour of the times in early, grey, post war Britain through this film and for me "Celia" was enjoyable which I rated 8/10.
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