On Borrowed Time

On Borrowed Time
VHS cover
Directed byHarold S. Bucquet
Written byAlice D. G. Miller
Frank O'Neill
Based onOn Borrowed Time
1937 novel
by Lawrence Edward Watkin
1938 play by Paul Osborn
Produced bySidney Franklin
StarringLionel Barrymore
Sir Cedric Hardwicke
Beulah Bondi
CinematographyJoseph Ruttenberg
Edited byGeorge Boemler
Music byFranz Waxman
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • July 6, 1939 (1939-07-06) (United States)
Running time
99 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

On Borrowed Time is a 1939 film about the role death plays in life, and how humanity cannot live without it. It is adapted from Paul Osborn's 1938 Broadway hit play. The play, based on a novel by Lawrence Edward Watkin, has been revived twice on Broadway since its original run.

The story is a retelling of a Greek fable in which Death is tricked into climbing a pear tree which had been blessed by Saint Polycarp to trap anyone who was trying to steal an old woman's pears.[1][2] The opening credits attribute the tale to Geoffrey Chaucer. "Mr. Chaucer liked the tale and believed it—and so do we. If perchance you don't believe it, we respectfully insist that we and Mr. Chaucer must be right. Because faith still performs miracles and a good deed does find its just reward." According to TCM.com,[3] this probably refers to Chaucer's "The Pardoner's Tale".

Set in small-town America, the film stars Lionel Barrymore, Beulah Bondi and Sir Cedric Hardwicke. Barrymore plays crotchety wheelchair-using Julian Northrup ("Gramps"), who smokes a smelly pipe, cherishes a smelly dog, prefers fishing to churchgoing, occasionally takes a nip of "tonic" and indulges in mild profanity. (Barrymore had broken his hip twice and was reliant on a wheelchair at the time.) Gramps and his wife, Nellie, played by Bondi, are raising their orphaned grandson, Pud, who adores his grandfather and mimics everything he does. Hardwicke plays Mr. Brink, the elegant and aloof personification of death.

  1. ^ The Routledge Modern Greek Reader, Η γριά κι ο Άγιος Πολύκαρπος
  2. ^ Ελπινίκη Σταμούλη-Σαραντή, Παραμύθια της Θράκης, Θρακικά. Σύγγραμα περιοδικόν εκδιδομένον υπό του εν Αθήναις Θρακικού Κέντρου, τόμος δέκατος έβδομος, 1942, σελ. 172–173.
  3. ^ "On Borrowed Time: Notes". www.tcm.com. Retrieved 2021-03-15.