Film Review
Powell and Pressburger followed their evocative
A Canterbury Tale with a film
which is imbued with an even greater sense of haunting lyricism and
charm. Whereas the former film showed us an idealised England of
the 1940s,
I Know Where I'm Going!
gives us a portrait of a mythical Scotland - a poetic land of bleak
landscapes, craggy mountains, velvet mists and Celtic legends - the
perfect setting for a delicate romantic drama.
What links these two very distinctive films is the notion that a
location can alter the life of an individual, achieving a spiritual
transformation for the better. The heroine of
I Know Where I'm Going! starts out
as a headstrong young woman who thinks that money is the key to a happy
future. Her arrival on a Scottish island opens her eyes to this
tragic self-deception and shows her that true happiness lies elsewhere,
deep within the human heart.
The only reason why
I Know Where I'm
Going! was made was because Powell and Pressburger found
themselves at a loose end whilst waiting to get hold of colour film for
A Matter of Life and Death -
all existing colour film in England had been requisitioned by the air
force for training purposes. In the interim, they decided to make
a simple, low budget black and white film, developed from an idea they had been
considering for some time. Famously, Pressburger wrote the
entire screenplay for the film in six days.
The casting of Wendy Hiller and Roger Livesey was an inspired
choice. Both actors play their parts with great subtlety and
restraint, downplaying their characters' mutual attraction so that the
film's ending is all the more surprising and poignant. (Owing to
West End commitments, Livesey was unavailable for the location
sequences, so these were filmed using a double - not that you would
ever notice.) In the background, there are a host of colourful
characters, such as the eccentric falconer Colonel Barnstable, played
wonderfully by C.W.R. Knight. 13-year old Petula Clark appears
briefly, some years before she made a hugely successful career as a
singer.
Much of the film's soul-stirring power lies in its alluring black and
white photography. Cinematographer Erwin Hillier surpasses his
work on
A Canterbury Tale and
manages to evoke both the poetry and bleakness of the Hebridean
setting. His shots of figures silhouetted against the brooding
Scottish landscape show the sheer insignificance of man in this vast
arena of unfathomable wonder and beauty, whilst the raging sea that
pummels the coastline relentlessly conveys the raw untamed power that
Nature has at her disposal, should she ever need to remind man of his
place in the scheme of things.
With its narrative simplicity, engaging characters and highly evocative
cinematography,
I Know Where I'm Going! is a captivating work, less
idiosyncratic and ambitious than other Powell-Pressburger productions,
but every bit as emotionally satisfying and stylish as their other
great films.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Michael Powell film:
A Matter of Life and Death (1946)
Film Synopsis
For her entire life, Joan Webster has always known where she is
going. Now aged 25, she intends to make her fortune by marrying
Sir Robert Bellinger, one of the richest men in England. Having
broken the news to her father, she takes a train northwards, since her
wedding is to take place on the Hebridean island of Kiloran. She
gets as far as the Isle of Mull before a storm breaks and she is
prevented from crossing the small stretch of sea to her final
destination. She meets a young navel officer, Torquil MacNeil,
who is also bound for Kiloran, for a holiday. Whilst
waiting for the weather to improve, Joan and Torquil get to know one
another, and Joan learns something of the region's culture.
Fearing that her growing attraction for Torquil may imperil her
marriage, Joan decides she cannot wait any longer and determines to
cross the sea to Kiloran, even though it is still not safe to do
so...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.