HG Wells co-wrote this adaptation of his short story about a placid everyman who suddenly finds whatever he wishes for comes true. It feels like a dramatised essay, as the hero's potential to create a utopia comes into conflict with vested interest which benefits from the masses suffering lives of poverty and war.
Wells is especially tough on capitalism which he describes as the exploitation of want. But he also takes on religion, politics and the military. Eventually he predicts George Orwell aphorism that absolute power corrupts absolutely and the world ends up with something close to totalitarianism.
Roland Young plays a dull fellow with a want of imagination, stuck in a dead end job. He meets a series of antagonists who challenge his new found powers. Ralph Richardson stands out as an irascible army officer who finds his weapons optimistically changed to ploughshares. The tone of the film is comical, but more whimsical than hilarious.
For the miracle effects, producer Alexander Korda brought in specialists from Hollywood, and these are the real standout of the film. The scene at the climax when a palace assembles around the cast is quite spectacular. It's the visual ambition which makes this fantasy much more than an interesting idea for The Twilight Zone.