Daily Archives: June 4, 2014

How Green Was My Valley (1941)

How Green Was My Valley
Directed by John Ford
Written by Philip Dunne based on the novel by Richard Llewellyn
1941/USA
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation

Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
#155 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

[box] Huw Morgan: [narrating] Men like my father cannot die. They are with me still, real in memory as they were in flesh, loving and beloved forever. How green was my valley then.[/box]

This is the film that famously trounced Citizen Kane at the 1942 Oscar ceremony.  There is no denying its beauty.

Huw Morgan (Roddy McDowall) looks back through the eyes of age at his childhood home in a Welsh coal-mining village and how a traditional way of life gradually fell apart. Gwyilm Morgan (Donald Crisp) and his wife (Sara Allgood) have a brood of six children – five boys and daughter Angharad (Maureen O’Hara).  Huw is much the youngest.  Gwylim and all the older boys work in the coal mine.  As the story begins, the eldest son weds Bronwyn (Anna Lee) and Huw becomes devoted to her.

Angharad loves the local preacher Mr. Gruffyd (Walter Pidgeon) from afar.  Her great beauty attracts the son of the local mine owner.  In desperation, she reveals her love to the minister, who obviously loves her too, but inexplicably he rejects her and she is doomed to a loveless marriage.

Meanwhile, the coal economy strains the family to the breaking point.  The sons become union men in defiance of their father and move out.  Then they are gradually forced to emigrate by diminishing wages and firings.  Huw eventually goes to work in the mine at a heartbreakingly young age.  Mine disasters plague the village.  But despite everything, humor and love ties everything and everyone together in the end.  With Barry Fitzgerald and Arthur Shields.

This is a spectacular looking film.  The landscapes and textures are brilliantly composed and shot.  Most of the acting is first-rate and Roddy McDowell gives one of the best performances ever by a child actor.  The thing that mars the movie for me is the discordant presence of the pedantic and boring Walter Pidgeon at its center.  His character is self-righteous in the extreme and rubs me the wrong way throughout.  It’s a shame because I know he is meant to be sympathetic.

How Green Was My Valley won Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Supporting Actor (Donald Crisp), Best Black-and-White Cinematography (Arthur C. Miller), and Best Black-and-White Art Direction.  It was nominated for Best Supporting Actress (Sara Allgood), Best Screenplay, Best Sound Recording, Best Film Editing and Best Scoring of a Dramatic Picture (Alfred Newman).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0yjfCUExOH0

Trailer

It Started with Eve (1941)

It Started with Eve
Directed by Henry Koster
Written by Norman Krasna, Leo Townsend and Hans Kraly
1941/USA
Universal Pictures

Repeat viewing/Deanna Durbin Sweetheart Collection DVD

[box] Dr. Harvey: I have a very pleasant surprise for you.

Jonathan Reynolds: Oh yes? How long will you be gone?[/box]

The only thing that distinguishes this from other Deanna Durbin vehicles is a nice performance by Charles Laughton.

It is the dying wish of Jonathan Reynolds (Laughton) to meet his son Johnny’s (Robert Cummings) fiancee. He can’t find his own girl so pays hat check girl Anne Terry (Durbin) to take her place.  Anne needs the money to return home with since her efforts to get hired as an opera singer in New York have been unsuccessful.  Naturally, Reynolds is so enamored of Anne that he perks right up.  And, when Anne finds out that Reynolds has connections with Toscanini, Stokowski and others, she holds on to the job long after Johnny wants to fire her.

Charles Laughton is usually good.  Here he plays a crotchety old man outwitting his doctor and nurse a little like his character in Witness for the Prosecution.  Other than that, this is a completely predictable Deanna Durbin musical.  She’s in good voice but most of the songs aren’t too memorable.

 It Started with Eve was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Music, Scoring of a Musical Picture.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCvY7KqR10M

Deanna Durbin sings for Charles Laughton