Pamela Cornell is a Set Decoration British born on 2000
Pamela Cornell
Pamela Cornell participated to
19 films (as actor, director or script writer).
Among those,
3 have good markets following the box office.
Here are the best films classified by number of entries :
Art
, 1h56
Directed by Ronald NeameOrigin United-kingdomGenres DramaThemes Films about education,
Children's filmsActors Maggie Smith,
Robert Stephens,
Celia Johnson,
Pamela Franklin,
Gordon Jackson,
Jane CarrRoles Set Dresser
Rating75%
Jean Brodie (Maggie Smith) is a teacher in the junior-aged section of the Marcia Blaine School for Girls in Edinburgh, Scotland in the 1930s. Brodie is known for her tendency to stray from the hard knowledge of the school's curriculum, to romanticize fascist leaders like Benito Mussolini and Francisco Franco, and to believe herself to be in the prime of life. Brodie devotes her time and energy to her four special 12-year-old junior school girls, called the Brodie Set: Sandy (Pamela Franklin), Monica (Shirley Steedman), Jenny (Diane Grayson) and Mary (Jane Carr)., 2h
Directed by Ronald NeameOrigin United-kingdomGenres Drama,
Science fiction,
Fantasy,
MusicalThemes Films about music and musicians,
Christmas films,
Time travel films,
Ghost films,
Musical filmsActors Albert Finney,
Alec Guinness,
Edith Evans,
Kenneth More,
Michael Medwin,
Laurence NaismithRoles Set Dresser
Rating74%
Ebenezer Scrooge (Albert Finney) is a cold-hearted and greedy old miser whose only concern is money and profit and hates everything to do with Christmas. After Scrooge scares off a group of boys who were singing a carol outside his door, his nephew Fred (Michael Medwin) arrives to invite him to Christmas dinner with his wife and friends. Scrooge, however, refuses. After Fred leaves, Scrooge gives his clerk Bob Cratchit (David Collings) the next day off as it is Christmas, but he expects him back all the earlier the next morning. Bob meets two of his children, including Tiny Tim (Richard Beaumont), in the streets, and they buy the food for their Christmas dinner. Scrooge, meanwhile, is surveyed by two other men (Derek Francis and Roy Kinnear) for a donation for the poor but Scrooge refuses to support the prisons and workhouses and even says "if they rather die, then they better do it and decrease the surplus population." On his way home, Scrooge meets some of his clients, including Tom Jenkins (Anton Rogers), and reminds them the debts they owe him. In a running gag, Scrooge is stalked and being made fun of by the same street urchins seen at the start of the film, calling him "Father Christmas.