The Guinea Pig (film)

The Guinea Pig is a 1948 British film directed and produced by the Boulting brothers, known as The Outsider in the United States. The film is adapted from the 1946 play of the same name by Warren Chetham-Strode.

Plot
The "guinea pig" is 14-year-old Jack Read (played by the 25-year-old Richard Attenborough), a tobacconist's son who, following the Fleming Report, is given a scholarship to Saintbury, an exclusive public school. Read's uncouth behaviour causes him difficulties in fitting into the school.

Only after the social changes caused by the Second World War could such a scenario be imagined.

Cast

 * Richard Attenborough as Jack Read
 * Sheila Sim as Lynne Hartley
 * Bernard Miles as Mr. Read
 * Cecil Trouncer as Lloyd Hartley
 * Robert Flemyng as Nigel Lorraine
 * Edith Sharpe as Mrs. Hartley
 * Joan Hickson as Mrs. Read
 * Timothy Bateson as Tracey
 * Herbert Lomas as Sir James Corfield
 * Anthony Newley as Miles Minor
 * Anthony Nicholls as Mr. Stringer
 * Wally Patch as Uncle Percy
 * Hay Petrie as Peck
 * Oscar Quitak as David Tracey
 * Kynaston Reeves as the Bishop
 * Olive Sloane as Aunt Mabel
 * Peter Reynolds as Grimmett

Production and reception
The film was from Pilgrim Pictures a new company set up by Filippo Del Guicide. It was financed by a "mystery industrialist".

The school location used in the film was Sherborne School, a public school in Dorset.

Reception
The film was controversial at the time of its first release, as it contains the first screen use of the word "arse".

The New York Times critic Bosley Crowther, at the time of the film's first American release, was unimpressed. According to Crowther, "the details are highly parochial, the attitudes of the characters are strangely stiff, the accents and idioms are hard to fathom—and the exposition is involved and tedious".

British trade papers called the film a "notable box office attraction" in British cinemas in 1949. As of 1 April 1950 the film earned distributor's gross receipts of £173,052 in the UK of which £121,824 went to the producer.

A reviewer for Time Out has called it, "solid entertainment, even if barely convincing".