Film Review
The Edge of the World is
effectively where Michael Powell's legendary filmmaking career
began. Although he had previously made around two dozen films,
mostly low budget quickies, this was the first film that he himself
initiated and in which his unmistakable auteur voice is first
apparent. A jarring mix of documentary and melodrama, the film
touches on a subject that had struck a profound chord with Powell, the
gradual depopulation of the Hebridean islands to the northwest of
Scotland as life on the islands became increasingly uneconomical.
When he began working on the film, Powell had in mind the evacuation of
St Kilda in August 1930, but he was unable to make the film on this
island. Undeterred, he obtained permission to shoot the film on
the island of Foula in the Shetlands (an island which is still
inhabited to this day, with a population of around 30). The
arduous location shoot took four months and, according to the book
which Powell subsequently wrote recounting his making of the film,
consumed 200,000 feet of film.
In terms of its subject matter, narrative form and visual style,
The Edge of the World is a very
different proposition to the more polished and conventional films that
Powell would subsequently make with his long-term collaborator Emeric
Pressburger. The narrative is as ragged and as sparse as the
forbidding island landscape, the uneven drama interspersed with
documentary-style interludes depicting everyday life on the
island. The film's most lyrical passages are almost throwbacks to
the silent era, masterfully composed images with an almost metaphysical
eeriness and solemnity, filling the entire field of view and expressing far more than
any quantity of dialogue. With the exception of John Laurie
and Finlay Currie, who both have a strong presence in the film and look
as if they genuinely do belong to the wind-lashed island, the
performances are generally lacklustre and characterless, but this is
made up for by the sheer visual beauty of the location
cinematography. Allowing for its stilted studio pick-ups
(which were presumably added so that the story made some kind of
sense),
The Edge of the World
has a bracing realism and poetry which sets it apart from virtually
every other British film of this era, and watching it today it is hard
to think of another film that is anything like it. This is a
hauntingly elegiac piece of cinema, one that compels us to join its
author in mourning the passing of a proud way of life that had endured
for many centuries before (to quote its opening caption) falling under
the slow shadow of death.
© James Travers 2012
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Next Michael Powell film:
The Spy in Black (1939)
Film Synopsis
Two tourists holidaying in the Hebrides land on the deserted island of
Hirta. Their guide Andrew Gray explains that until a decade ago
there was a thriving community on the island. Encountering a
gravestone with the name Peter Manson at the top of a sharp drop into
the sea, Gray reveals that he was one of the islanders, once engaged to
a girl named Ruth, Manson's daughter. Manson also had a son,
Robbie, who was keen to leave the island and start a new life on the
mainland. To decide the fate of their fellow islanders,
Robbie and Gray agreed to compete against one another in an ancient
challenge: to ascend a steep cliff face without ropes. Ignoring
his friend's advice, Robbie tried to use a short cut, only to plummet
to his death. Grief-stricken, Manson withdrew his consent for his
daughter's marriage and Gray moved away to the mainland, not knowing
that Ruth was carrying his child...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.