VideoDetective.com
The Corn Is Green (1945)
Released By: MGM Home Entertainment   Rating: Not Rated   In Theaters: N/A
Your video will start shortly...



More Videos:
Preview Details
User Reviews
Studio: MGM Home Entertainment
Genre: Drama
MPAA Rating: Not Rated
Director: Irving Rapper
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Bette Davis, Joan Lorring, John Dall
Published ID: 607
UPC: N/A
Plot: In this 1945 filmization of Emlyn Williams' semi-autobiographical 1938 play {+The Corn is Green,} Bette Davis steps into the role originated on Broadway by Ethel Barrymore. Davis plays Miss Moffat, a turn-of-the-century schoolteacher in a Welsh mining town. She has opened her own school in hopes of lowering the town's illiteracy rate, thus enabling the younger residents to seek out more fulfilling lives than merely sweating away in the mines until they drop. She runs into a great deal of resistance from mine-owner Nigel Bruce, who realizes that as soon as the citizens can read and write, they'll rebel against his benevolent despotry. Even Miss Moffat concludes that her mission is hopeless until she is visited by young miner John Dall, who wants to know what is behind all those books. Within two years, Dall has made so much progress that he has qualified for Oxford. A last-minute snag involving Dall's illegitimate child is solved when Miss Moffet herself agrees to adopt the baby so that her student can complete his education. Emlyn Williams himself came from a backward mining town, and was himself inspired to better things by a compassionate schoolteacher; the pregnancy angle was (probably) added to provide the story with a third act. The Corn is Green was remade for television in 1978, with Katharine Hepburn as Miss Moffat. Watch for one amusing gaffe in the original: despite carefully setting up the premise that the villagers are illiterate, they are shown hovering around a poster and reading it out loud in an early scene. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Another Great Bette Davis Film.
Added 9/18/2009

The Corn Is Green is fine film by the renown Ms.Davis, that gives us a look at the life
of a teacher and her students in 19th century Wales.
With the exception of How Green was My Valley, (who's plot line runs similar.) there aren't many film set in that beautiful country.
But my question is, Why hasn't this wonderful movie been included in a Bette Davis
dvd film collection yet? Or offered as a dvd single?

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
The Corn Is Green
Added 1/11/2006

"A full, ripe ear of emotion and enjoyment"

-New York Herald Tribune

Bette Davis gives a sharp, vital interpretation of Miss Moffat(the spinster teacher fighting to educate the poor children of a Welsh mining village)...by remaining true to its legitimate stage counterpart," adds the Hearld Tribune.

The story, based on Emlyn Williams' autobiographical play, focuses on the relationship between Miss Moffat and her gifted young prodigy from the mines, Morgan Evans (John Dall). "Consumed by inward fire, by the sheer joy of imparting knowledge" (London Picture Post), she molds him into a legitimate candidate for an Oxford scholarship in the remarkably short span of two years. Despite the disaster of Morgan's seduction by trouble-making Bessie (Joan Lorring), the mutual struggle between teacher and pupil becomes a glorious triumph of the human spirit.

"Only Bette Davis....could have combatted so successfully the obvious intention of the adaptors of the play to make frustrated sex the mainspring of the plot."

-Picture Post

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Intense Relationship Between Teacher and Student
Added 11/9/2002

Bette Davis stars as Miss Moffat, who inherits a home in a Welsh mining town and decides that she will educate the young, especially the boys, who are otherwise doomed to a life in the mines. One student, played by John Dall, gets her attention when he reveals depth beyond what she expected, and before long, they are working hard towards getting him a scholarship to Oxford. However, the housekeeper's conniving daughter threatens to ruin everything. Davis is very good as the crusading, very emotionally controlled middle-aged teacher, only once in a while letting us see her act. The supporting cast are all good, with Dall especially strong as the student fighting against his background. There is the occasional moment of stiff dialogue, but there are also some terrific lines as the intense relationship between teacher and student is explored. Irving Rapper doesn't have much punch as a director in this or any of his other films that I have seen, but the story is the kind that will draw you in and having you rooting for the underdog.
7 out of 8 people found this helpful.
DAVIS WILL SAVE US.
Added 6/16/2002

Bette Davis does a commendable job portraying L.C. Moffat, the prim, spinsterish English school teacher who comes to the small village of Glensarno, Wales to claim a house she's inherited. Moffat is appalled at the lack of education received by the young men who live in ignorance and squalor in the mining community, so she decides to set up her own school and teach what she can to those who are willing to learn. Miss Moffat's prize pupil is Morgan Evans (John Dall, his debut) who shows natural intelligence, perhaps genius...Rosalind Ivan does well as Watty, the reformed shoplifter who has become an activist in a militant religious group. Joan Lorring also made her debut in the movies playing - with considerable skill - Bessie, Watty's strumpet daughter who eventually complicates matters with her feminine "charms". Davis is so terribly noble and plays the martyr with such conviction that you are only subconsciously aware of the sexual undercurrent between the student and teacher; her devotion to Evans is at once gently heartfelt and and poignantly bitter. Mildred Dunnock borders on being a pain as the prim Miss Ronberry and Rys Williams is adequately square as Mr. Jones, the shop clerk. Nigel Bruce does well enough as the pompous Squire, a landowner who is ultimately "won-over" by the "charm" of Miss Moffat (did she resort to using clever psychology perchance?).
5 out of 5 people found this helpful.
Welcome to Wales (California)
Added 9/24/2001

The movie opens as the Welsh miners return from a day in the pits. One wonders why they aren't all carving out for themselves careers in the arts, since the combined force of their voices as they merrily sing their way across hill and dale rivals the Mormon Tabernacle Choir for sound. Of course, if you happen to live in Wales, this kind of virtuosic performance would probably be a fact of everyday life to you. As would those strained, tortured accents. Rhys Williams has a few amusing moments, but one worries about his apparent identity complex-he can't seem to make up his mind whether he is Welsh or Irish, so he throws in a little of both just to be sure. Similarly, John Dall (who would nowadays be largely forgotten were it not for his role as one of the notorious killers in Hitchcock's 'Rope') tries desperately to convince Bette Davis that he is just a poor kid who all his life knew nothing other than impoverished village life in the heart of Wales, but his accent gives him away-he was obviously brought up in America, with brief stints in Ireland and Scotland, before being transported to his current locale.

Mocking aside, this is a good movie. We can forgive Hollywood for the awful attempts at Welsh accents (any Americans reading this review are probably sitting there bemused, thinking, What, so they don't really talk like that in Wales? Yeh, sure-and all the Londoners I know sound just like Dick Van Dyke). It is a moving story of an early feminist who takes it upon herself to educate the deprived children of a small mining community. She faces opposition from the local Squire (the ever-loveable Nigel Bruce) and from the ignorant masses (don't worry-they grow to love her), but still bravely ploughs on to introduce the town to the joys of Shakespeare, the benefits of arithmetic, and the charms of good grammar. She takes a young lad (Dall) under her wing and in him recognizes the seeds of a genius, so sets about gaining him a scholarship at Oxford. The picture ends on a good note with a little melancholy thrown in for good measure. It is actually a very thoughtful story, that set me thinking about sacrifice, servanthood and dedication. Production values are generally high, and the whole thing is played out with a good sense of humour and at a nice pace.


5 out of 8 people found this helpful.
Photos


There are currently no photos.
Shopping
IDPriceImageUrlPurchaseUrlIdTypeBindingStore
VHS
$35.89 @ Amazon