Separate Tables

    Separate Tables
    1958

    Synopsis

    Boarders at an English resort struggle with emotional problems.

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    Cast

    • Deborah KerrSibyl Railton-Bell
    • Rita HayworthAnn Shankland
    • David NivenDavid Angus Pollock
    • Wendy HillerPat Cooper
    • Burt LancasterJohn Malcolm
    • Gladys CooperMrs. Railton-Bell
    • Cathleen NesbittGladys Matheson
    • Felix AylmerMr. Fowler
    • Rod TaylorCharles
    • Audrey DaltonJean

    Recommendations

    • 100

      TV Guide Magazine

      This is adult, intelligent stuff, marvelously shaded by the amalgamation of talents.
    • 88

      The Seattle Times

      Absorbing 1958 adaptation of Terence Rattigan's play about lonely people at a British seaside hotel. [20 Aug 1998]
    • 80

      The New York Times

      The characters here are all misfits—people who have not quite been able to adjust their own inadequacies and terrors to the hard realities of life. And it is in the revelation of these people to a more or less brilliant extent that the fascination and satisfaction of this picture lie.
    • 80

      Variety

      Much of the appeal of Terence Rattigan's play was due to the remarkable change in characterization they were able to make as they assumed different roles in each of the segents. Rattigan and John Gay have masterfully blended the two playlets into one literate and absorbing full-length film.
    • 80

      Orlando Sentinel

      A superb character study of the residents of an English seaside hotel. [17 Oct 1999, p.56]
    • 70

      Los Angeles Times

      The movie is sheer soap opera, but fine writing by Terence Rattigan (upon whose play it is based) gives the melodrama meaning. And a cast sure to make any movie lover swoon (David Niven, Deborah Kerr, Burt Lancaster, Rita Hayworth and Wendy Hiller) takes the poignancy to levels that are sometimes painful to watch. [07 Oct 1993, p.17]
    • 40

      Chicago Reader

      It's hard to believe that anything this academic and artificial was once considered great filmmaking, but you can look it up.

    Seen by

    • MARTIN