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Tom Brown's School Days

Tom Brown's School Days

  • Status: Released
  • 26-06-1940
  • Runtime: 86 min
  • Score: 7.2
  • Vote count: 11

When private tutor Thomas Arnold (Sir Cedric Hardwicke) becomes headmaster at Rugby, a boy's preparatory school in England, he puts into place a policy of strict punishment for unruliness and bulying. Arnold finds an ally in Tom Brown (Jimmy Lydon), a new student who is subjected to hazing and abuse by a group of older boys and is pressured by his friends to keep quiet about it. Fed up, he leads his fellow classmates in an underground rebellion against their tormentors. But certain unspoken rules still apply at the school and Brown loses his hero status when he is accussed of breaking the Rugby code of silence.

Cedric Hardwicke

Dr. Thomas Arnold

Freddie Bartholomew

East

Jimmy Lydon

Tom Brown

Josephine Hutchinson

Mrs. Mary Arnold

Billy Halop

Flashman

Polly Moran

Sally Harowell

Hughie Green

Walker Brooke

Ernest Cossart

Squire Brown

Alec Craig

Old Thomas

Gale Storm

Effie

Antoinette Rotche

Tom Brown's Nanny

Lionel Belmore

Tavern Keeper

Barlowe Borland

Grimsby aka Old Grimey

Rita Carlyle

Maid

Richard Clucas

Boy

John 'Uh huh' Collum

Sidney

Harry Duff

Westcott

Calvin Ellison

Boy

Harold Entwistle

Dustman

Ian Fulton

Old Brodie

Forrester Harvey

Sam the Coachman

Cullen Johnson

Boy

Calvin Leslie

Boy

Peter Madden

Jacob

Paul Mathews

Lexton

Frank Mills

School Porter

Alexander Pollard

Butler

Charles Smith

Diggs

Walter Tetley

Student

Tommy Thompson

Boy

Richard West

Boy

Leonard Willey

Farmer Jenkins

Dick Chandlee

Tadpole Martin

CinemaSerf

There is something almost vicarious about this depiction of the trials and tribulations of the young "Tom Brown" (Jimmy Lydon) as he struggles at the famous Rugby school. It's more of an evaluation of his impassioned headmaster "Thomas Arnold" (Sir Cedric Hardwicke in one of his more substantial roles) who, despite his reputation for rather unorthodox teaching, accepts this position determined to drag education kicking and screaming, if needs be, into a new century. Like it or not, "Brown" is the to be held up as exemplar for his ideals. The story addresses the issues around modernising learning, but also of integrity and decency (and, frequently, the lack of those virtues) amongst the boys as they grow into men. "Flashman" (Billy Halop) is particularly effective as the young man's tormentor and Robert Stevenson creates a story that offers us an opportunity to scrutinise the aspirations (and sacrifices) of both teacher and pupils alike. Freddie Bartholomew ("Ned") and Josephine Hutchinson ("Mrs. Arnold") add richness to, and diversion from, the intensity of the story and help present us with decent thought-provoking exposé of attitudes and loyalties that still resonate 80 years later...