Film Review
Painted Boats is Ealing
Studios' warm tribute to the men and women who worked and lived on
England's canals in the 1940s. It remains one of the company's most enchanting
films, despite its somewhat uneven mix of documentary, wartime
propaganda and drama. Ealing's motivation for making the film was
presumably to draw the public's attention to the importance of the
canals, which had fallen into neglect in previous years but which were
proving to be essential for the British war effort.
The film was an early offering from director Charles Crichton, a former
film editor who would later distinguish himself with some of Ealing's
best-known films, including the much-loved classics
Hue
and Cry (1947) and
The Lavender Hill Mob (1951). Crichton would in later years
co-direct
A Fish Called Wanda (1988)
with ex-Python John Cleese. Heading a
pretty nondescript cast is a young and comely Jenny Laird, who would fail to
hit the big time but who would nonetheless become a familiar face to
British television audiences in the sixties and seventies.
If
Painted Boats were merely a piece of wartime drama,
it probably deserves to be forgotten - particularly as the delivery from most of the so-called
actors is as wooden as the barges they are standing on. What has given
the film its longevity is its educational content. It explains,
briefly, how the canals came into being during the early years of the
Industrial Revolution and reminds us of the their importance as a vital
transportation network for over 150 years. It also relates,
rather poignantly, how the canals fell into decline when road and rail
took over their work in the early decades of the 20th Century.
The principal charm of this unjustly overlooked film lies in the naturalistic way in which it is
shot, on the Grand Union Canal against a backdrop of some of the most
beautiful scenery in England. The film evokes
a way of life that appears idyllic but which, as we soon discover, was
exceptionally hard.
Painted
Boats is not so much a film as a
window onto a past that will be unrecognisable to most of
us. It provides not only a valuable visual record of a
noble tradition that has long since passed away, but a powerful
statement of the transience of all things.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Charles Crichton film:
Hue and Cry (1947)
Film Synopsis
For generations, the Smith and Stoner families have lived and worked on
the canals of England, transporting valuable cargoes between the great
industrial heartlands of the country. Whilst the latest
generation of Smiths adhere to the tradition of the horse-drawn barge,
the Stoners have moved on and embraced motorisation. Despite this
divergence, the two families remain on the best of terms, and nothing
will dissuade Mary Smith from marrying Ted Stoner. When her father dies suddenly,
Mary cannot bear to give up the only life she has known and so takes
his place, supported only by her old mother. She then receives
further bad news...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.