
Notable Film Fact(s):
The film is a 1941 American drama film, based on the Richard Llewellyn novel of the same name.
It was nominated for ten Academy Awards, winning five and beating out such classics as Citizen Kane, The Maltese Falcon, and Sergeant York for Best Picture. However, this film has become a classic in its own right.
William Wyler, the original director, saw the screen-test of McDowall and chose him for the part. Wyler was replaced later by director John Ford.
Ford wanted to shoot the movie in Wales, but events in Europe during World War II made this impossible. Instead, he built a replica of the mining town at the nearly 3,000-acre Fox Ranch in Malibu Canyon.
The film tells the story of a close, hard-working Welsh family at the turn of the twentieth century in the South Wales coalfield. However, the cast had only one genuinely Welsh actor in a minor role, Rhys Williams.
In 1990, How Green Was My Valley was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".
Film Synopsis:
The story is told through the eyes, and with the voice-over narration of Huw Morgan (Roddy McDowall), now a middle-aged man leaving the mining town of Cwm Rhondda, recalling the events that most impressed his younger self. The boy Huw is played by Roddy, but the voice-over is that of actor Irving Pichel, who is never seen in the film.
His first memories are of the marriage of his brother, Ivor (Patric Knowles), and the burgeoning, unspoken, and ill-fated romance of his sister, Angharad (Maureen O'Hara) with the new preacher, Mr. Gruffydd (Walter Pidgeon). Because of the forbidden nature of the romance, Angharad marries another man, whom she later divorces, and Mr. Gruffydd leaves his church in disgust after being subjected to untrue town gossip - his romance with Angharad is never consummated, nor do they ever marry. Still too young to work in the local coal mine like his father, Gwilym (Donald Crisp), and his five older brothers, Huw senses the seriousness of an imminent strike by the rift it creates between his father and the other boys when three of them move out of the family abode.
During the tensions of the strike, Huw saves his mother (Sara Allgood) from drowning and in so doing temporarily loses the use of his legs. As Gruffydd aids in Huw's recovery, insisting on a positive attitude, he suggests that it is only the first of many trials the boy will have to face. Other subplots are featured in the film. The film concludes with the death of the father in a mining accident.
Director:
John Ford
Producer:
Darryl F. Zanuck
Screenplay:
Philip Dunne
Cast:
Walter Pidgeon
Maureen O'Hara
Anna Lee
Donald Crisp
Roddy McDowall
John Loder
Sara Allgood
Barry Fitzgerald
Patric Knowles
Morton Lowry
Arthur Shields
Ann E. Todd
Frederick Worlock
Richard Fraser
Evan S. Evans
James Monks
Rhys Williams
Lionel Pape
Ethel Griffies
Marten Lamont
Distributor:
Twentieth Century Fox
Release Date(s): October 28, 1941 (USA)
Running time: 118 minutes
My View Rating: ***
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