请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 East of Elephant Rock
释义

  1. Plot

  2. Cast

  3. Production

  4. Reception

  5. See also

  6. References

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2016}}{{Use British English|date=June 2016}}

East of Elephant Rock is a 1977 British independent drama film directed by Don Boyd and starring John Hurt, Jeremy Kemp and Judi Bowker. It was Boyd's second feature film following his little-noticed 1975 Intimate Reflections.[1][2] Like William Somerset Maugham's 1927 play The Letter and two subsequent film adaptations, its narrative content depended on the 1911 Ethel Proudlock murder in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, which became a cause célèbre scandalising British colonial society and which had been featured in a Sunday Observer article as recently as the year before.[3][4] Boyd, drawing in part on his own experience of growing up in an increasingly dysfunctional family in Kenya during the Mau Mau rebellion, wanted to tell a story about the decline of the Empire and the surrender of responsibility.[5][6] In the event his project was for the most part ridiculed but the film did draw warm support from the film director Bryan Forbes.

Plot

The film is set in South East Asia in 1948 in an unnamed British colony. Embassy secretary Nash is having an affair with a native woman. He takes as mistress the wife of a plantation owner with fateful (and fatal) consequences.

Cast

  • John Hurt ... Nash
  • Jeremy Kemp ... Harry Rawlins
  • Judi Bowker ... Eve Proudfoot
  • Christopher Cazenove ... Robert Proudfoot
  • Anton Rodgers ... Mackintosh
  • Tariq Yunus ... Inti
  • Vajira Cabraal ... Sharmani
  • Sam Poythress ... 1st Governor General
  • Edward De La Mare ... 2nd Governer General
  • Geoffrey Hale ... District Commissioner
  • Upali Attanayaka ... Rawlins' Houseboy
  • J. B. L. Gunasekera ... Sharmani's Uncle
  • Philip Grice ... Man in Rickshaw

Production

The film is treated at length in Alexander Walker's book National Heroes: British Cinema in the 70's and 80's.[6] The script was written by Richard Boyle, with input from fellow journalist, James Atherton.

Filming took place during a four-week period in April and May of 1976, on location in Sri Lanka, with a budget of just £100,000.[7] Post production was undertaken in London and the film's score was composed by Peter Skellern.

Reception

The film was selected for the 1976 London Film Festival. The programme notes pointed out:{{quote|text= All through the production there was a conscious stylistic discipline of creating a film to echo the moods and mannerisms of the heyday of big studios in the 1940s, and yet encompass a modern approach. This is not to say that it is not a genre movie; indeed much of its charm is derived from the fact that it is not easily categorized with other films being made today.[7]}}

It took a year for Boyd to find a distributor and then secure a release, as it was an independent production - without any studio backing. Its first general screening was in January 1978, at the brand-new four-screen Classic 1-2-3-4 on Oxford Street in London.[7]

The film received an extraordinarily hostile UK press and there were suggestions that Boyd had 'ripped-off' William Wyler's classic film noir The Letter. Boyd responded, not implausibly, that he simply hadn't seen Wyler's film but he certainly knew of the Proudlock affair.

Philip French, writing in The Times, commented:[8] {{quote|text = The writer-director Don Boyd embellished his tale with some political background .. with not the remotest understanding of colonial politics in the post world-war. Elephant Rock is badly lit, badly edited and badly acted. Typically in the course of a love scene on a railway platform, the station clock moves back half an hour.}}while Time Out characterised it as a "depressingly redundant sample of British independent cinema".[9]

Alexander Walker's view was more nuanced. He praises the film's often glorious mise en scène on a limited budget and especially valorises Jeremy Kemp's performance but agrees the story was ineptly handled.[6]

Bryan Forbes came to the film's defence in a letter to The Times [10] {{quote|text = At a time when the British film industry desperately needs sympathetic encouragement, it is sad that such a worthy endeavour by a young director ... should be greeted with such a distorted - and to those who know - unfair reception}} later joking that his letter had cost him good reviews for his own films ever since.[6]

The Evening Standard stated {{quote | text = Whatever Don Boyd can’t do, he can involve you in a real sense of people and space; the small-timers of backwoods administration living it up in feudal style, clustering ever more tightly together at the cocktail parties for security. The present scenic glories and past mementoes of Empire in Ceylon give the film a perspiring sense of social authenticity.[7]}}

See also

  • The Long Day Wanes: A Malayan Trilogy. Anthony Burgess' definitive fictional exploration of post-war colonial life in Malaya during the Malayan Emergency.

References

1. ^{{cite web |url= http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/61497|title= East of Elephant Rock|work= BFI database|accessdate= 21 March 2011}}
2. ^{{cite web |url= https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0075970/|title= East of Elephant Rock|work= IMBd|accessdate= 21 March 2011}}
3. ^{{cite book |last= Lawlor |first= Eric |title= Murder on the Verandah: Love and Betrayal in British Malaysia |publisher= Flamingo |date=March 2000 |isbn= 0-00-655065-7}}
4. ^{{cite web |url= http://viweb.freehosting.net/proudlock.htm|title= The Proudlock Saga|author= Chung Chee Min|work= The Victoria Institution Web Page|accessdate= 21 March 2011}}
5. ^{{cite web |url= http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/853952|title= Storyville:Donald and Luba - A Family Movie|work= BFI database|accessdate= 21 March 2011}}
6. ^{{cite book |last= Walker |first= Alexander |title= National Heroes: British Cinema in the 70's and 80's |pages = 147–150 |publisher= Orion |date=September 2005 |origyear= 1985 |isbn= 0-7528-5707-X}}
7. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.sundaytimes.lk/170423/plus/john-hurts-reel-life-in-lanka-237719.html|title=John Hurts Reel Life in Lanka|newspaper=Sunday Times|last=Boyle|first=Richard|date=23 April 2017|accessdate=28 February 2018}}
8. ^{{cite news |title= Film review: East of Elephant Rock |author= Philip French |url= |newspaper= The Times|date= 13 January 1978 |accessdate= }}
9. ^{{cite web |url= http://www.timeout.com/film/reviews/63669/east-of-elephant-rock.html|title= East of Elephant Rock|work= Time Out|accessdate= 21 March 2011}}
10. ^{{cite news |title= Letter: East of Elephant Rock |author= Bryan Forbes |url= |newspaper= The Times|date= 20 January 1978 |accessdate= }}
{{DEFAULTSORT:East Of Elephant Rock}}

9 : 1977 films|1970s historical films|British films|British historical films|English-language films|British independent films|Films shot in Sri Lanka|Films directed by Don Boyd|Films set in the British Empire

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/20 19:28:37