Film Review
Heartened by the success of
The Ring, Alfred Hitchcock was
somewhat taken aback when his employers at British Internation Pictures
requested him to adapt a stage play - in this case Eden Phillpotts' hit
The Farmer's Wife.
One of the reasons why the director had left Gainsborough to work for
BIP was because he had resented being saddled with the direction of two
play adaptations. Unable to turn down the request, Hitchcock
decided to make the best of a bad job, presumably believing that if he
agreed to make this film and it proved successful, he would have more
freedom later on. Such is the naivety of youth.
It may not have been Hitchcock's forte, but
The Farmer's Wife stands as one of
his most charming films, and it proved to be an immense commercial
success. It is by far his funniest film, with visual and scripted
jokes that provoke the kind of laugh-out-loud reaction that is more
associated with a great Chaplin film. The comedic highpoint is an
hilarious tea party, the only piece of pure slapstick to feature in a
Hitchcock film. All this fun is counter-pointed by some moments
of genuine poignancy, which are equally unusual for Hitchcock.
One of the biggest problems filmmakers faced when adapting plays for
silent cinema was what to do with the dialogue. If too much
dialogue is cut out, the story will be hard for an audience to follow;
if too much is left in, the film will be little more than a blaze of
inter-titles. Hitchcock's innate talent for telling a story
through images and his virtuosity with the camera allowed him to
sidestep the problem. By using carefully composed pictures to
tell the story, much of the dialogue in the original play becomes
superfluous. Interestingly, Hitchcock took charge of the
camerawork for part of the film when his cinematographer, Jack E. Cox,
fell ill during the shoot, so he had far greater control over the
visuals than he usually enjoyed.
Here, Hitchcock shows great ingenuity in the way he employs cinematic
devices to avoid dialogue and show what characters are thinking without
resorting to inter-titles. This is best illustrated in the scene
where Minta's feelings for her employer becomes apparent and then later
when Sweetland realises that his housekeeper would make the perfect
wife. These work because Hitchcock had previously used two chairs
beside a fireplace to symbolise the happy union of Sweetland and his
future wife. Another thing that Hitchcock does to take us out of
the confines of the stage play is to include several exterior location
shots. Set in some breathtakingly beautiful English countryside,
these give a real sense of country life which adds to the film's
bucolic charm and poetry.
The Farmer's Wife is not only
superbly directed and photographed, it also benefits from an
exceptionally talented cast. Jameson Thomas gives a sympathetic
tragic-comical performance as the farmer Sweetland, whilst Lilian
Hall-Davis (who had previously featured in
The Ring) plays the part of the
housekeeper with a subtlety and realism that is rare in silent
cinema. Most of the rest of the cast delight us with their wildly
over-the-top histrionics, notably Gordon Harker as the handyman Ash and
Maud Gill as one of the reluctant brides.
Anyone who believes that Hitchcock was only capable of directing one
kind of film - the suspenseful crime thriller - should take a look at
this film, and be pleasantly surprised.
The Farmer's Wife is a
marvellously entertaining illustration of Hitchcock's lighter side, and
assuredly one of the most likeable comedies of the silent era in
British cinema.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
Blackmail (1929)
Film Synopsis
For some time, farmer Samuel Sweetland has been without a wife.
On the day of his daughter's wedding, he decides it is time that he
re-married. The prospect of a future alone without a good woman
by his side is unbearable. So, with the help of his faithful
housekeeper, Minta, he draws up a list of eligible middle-aged
spinsters. There are four candidates, all of whom should be an
easy catch for a man of Sweetland's standing and rugged good
looks. However, when he broaches the question of marriage, each
one of them seems remarkably unwilling to take him seriously...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.