My Learned Friend is a 1943 British, black-and-white, comedy, farce, directed by Basil Dearden, co-directed with regular collaborator Will Hay and starring Ronald Shiner as the Man in Wilson's café, Will Hay as William Fitch and Charles Victor as "Safety" Wilson. It was produced by Michael Balcon, Robert Hamer and Ealing Studios. The film's title refers to a tradition in British law: when addressing either the court or the judge, a barrister refers to the opposing counsel uses the respectful term, "my learned friend". The supporting cast included Claude Hulbert, Mervyn Johns and Ernest... Thesiger. This comedy sees Will Hay playing a seedy lawyer, who finds himself marked for assassination by a forger that he defended unsuccessfully, in the past. He teams up with an incompetent solicitor to try to prevent the deaths of others involved. The film climaxes with a sequence where Hay hangs from the hands of the clock face of Big Ben in an attempt to prevent a time bomb being detonated. This scene was later borrowed for the 1978 version of The Thirty-Nine Steps and for the Jackie Chan film Shanghai Knights in 2003.
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| Release date: | 1943 |
| Directed by: | Will Hay, Basil Dearden |
| Runtime: | 74 Minutes |
| Producer: | Michael Balcon |
| Editor: | Charles Hasse |
| Screenplay by: | John Dighton |
| Genre: | Comedy |