Film Review
So adverse was the critical reaction to
Ryan's Daughter on its first
release in 1970 that its director David Lean vowed to give up
filmmaking for good; indeed it would be more than a decade before he
was inclined to blow the dust off his clapperboard and resume his
career, bowing out in style with
A Passage to India
(1984). Perversely, whilst the critics loathed the film, it was
not a commercial failure; in fact it was one of the most commercially
successful British films of the year. The film was nominated for
four Oscars, and won two awards, in the categories of Best Supporting
Actor (John Mills) and Best Cinematography (Freddie Young). Since
Lean's death in 1991, many of his films have undergone a fresh
appraisal, and the one film to have benefited most from this is
Ryan's Daughter, which is now
considered by many to be on a par with the director's other great
accomplishments.
Loosely inspired by Gustave Flaubert's novel
Madame Bovary,
Ryan's Daughter offers a familiar
tale of frustrated passions set against the imposing backdrop of
Ireland's struggle for independence during the First World War.
The small human dramas appear dwarfed both by the momentous events
taking place outside the close-knit community and the raw power of the
elements, particularly the gigantic waves that smash onto the coast in
the oft repeating storms. The film has as much of the visual
spectacle of Lean's previous blockbuster epics but it marks a return to
the intimacy of his early films, his romantic dramas
Brief Encounter (1945),
The Passionate Friends (1949)
and
Madeleine (1950). The
personal crises of the protagonists are as sensitively rendered, and as
skilfully played, as in any other David Lean film, and the only thing
we can reproach the director for is by trying to paint these onto too
grand a canvas. Lean's cinematic ambitions are perhaps too much
for the narrative to support, and so the film appears ludicrously
overblown at times, weakening its humanity and dramatic impact.
Ryan's Daughter is not only
one of the most visually striking of David Lean's films - Freddie
Young's photography of the Irish landscape is breathtaking in its
majesty and lyrical potency - it is also one of his best
scripted. Robert Bolt's screenplay effortlessly knits together
the small human dramas and sets them within the context of the period
without diluting their impact. Some of the casting decisions
would appear, at first sight, to be a little eccentric, but on balance
the ensemble of established A-listers and rising stars proves to be an
inspired mix, the performances as moving and enjoyable as in any other
David Lean film. Trevor Howard and John Mills, the stars of the
director's early masterpieces
Brief
Encounter (1945) and
Great Expectations (1946),
prove to be shameless scene-stealers, the one playing a fiercely
moralistic Catholic priest, the other a deformed idiot who is badly in
need of a dentist and speech therapist, but neither manages to eclipse
the magnificent Sarah Miles, who turns in the best performance of her
career as the eponymous wayward heroine, or Robert Mitchum, who is
surprisingly effective in a far more fragile and introspective role
than he is known for. Although Lean lived to regret casting
Christopher Jones (not liking his high-pitched voice, he was forced to
dub him with another actor) the latter's brooding presence and haunted
visage bring the appropriate melancholic touch to the film's memorably
bleak ending. Leo McKern is equally superb as the treacherous
landlord, particularly in the sequence in which he cannot bring himself
to save his daughter from a public lynching. On both the acting
and scripting front, the film could hardly be improved upon.
With its three hour and fifteen minute runtime,
Ryan's Daughter demands a huge
commitment from its spectator, but this it just about manages to repay
with its stunning visuals and a well-crafted story of conflict and
desire which Lean weaves with his customary cinematic mastery.
Even the most fervent admirers of Lean's work will have to admit that
the film is a tad over-long and too grand for the story it has to tell,
that it might have been far more impressive if the director had had the
discipline to rein in his ambitions a little (he did in fact shave
around 25 minutes off the original 220 minute cut after a negative
preview to improve the pacing). Whilst it is not as perfectly
hewn as Lean's other great films,
Ryan's
Daughter is eminently watchable, and bears absolutely no
resemblance to the cinematic monstrosity which the critics thought they
saw when it was first screened. The moral: never believe a film
critic.
© James Travers 2012
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Next David Lean film:
A Passage to India (1984)
Film Synopsis
At the time of the First World War, Rosy Ryan lives a bored, unfilled
life in an isolated little village on the Dingle Peninsula on the
southwest coast of Ireland. She is the daughter of the local
publican, Thomas Ryan, who appears committed to Ireland's struggle for
independence from the British, but he is in fact an informer. The
villagers are insular and fervently nationalistic; they taunt both the
spoiled Rosy and her closest admirer, a deformed village idiot named
Michael. Father Hugh Collins, the most respected member of the
community, has an uphill struggle trying to keep the villagers in
order, but he understands their anger: unemployment has robbed the
menfolk of their dignity and plunged their families into abject
poverty. Rosy is in love with the village schoolmaster, Charles
Shaughnessy, and persuades him to marry her, although the marriage soon
proves to be a disappointment. Rosy turns her attention to
Major Randolph Doryan, a shellshocked, badly injured British army
officer who has just arrived to take command of a nearby army
base. Rosy's affair with the major is noticed not only by her
husband, who bides his time, hoping it will burn itself out, but also
by the villagers, who turn against her. When Doryan shoots and
captures Tim O'Leary, the leader of the Irish Republican Brotherhood,
the villagers decide to take their revenge on Rosy...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.