Agrega una trama en tu idiomaIn a Welsh coal mining valley, a young man with a beautiful singing voice is called upon to make the ultimate sacrifice when a pit disaster threatens.In a Welsh coal mining valley, a young man with a beautiful singing voice is called upon to make the ultimate sacrifice when a pit disaster threatens.In a Welsh coal mining valley, a young man with a beautiful singing voice is called upon to make the ultimate sacrifice when a pit disaster threatens.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Mr. Trevor
- (as Alan Jeayes)
- Mr. Howes - Collector
- (sin créditos)
- Company Clerk
- (sin créditos)
- Lloyd - Miner
- (sin créditos)
- Cage Operator
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
This sort of plot is not at all surprising for Robeson, as he was a committed life-long socialist--with some communist sympathies. This is NOT meant as a criticism--just explaining his affinity towards the downtrodden and labor unions (which were important in providing a safe working environment for the miners). But I love that the film is not preachy about--it just shows their difficulties as well as their work ethic, values, belief in God and strong wills. A wonderful film and a nice film to see in a double-feature with "How Green Was My Valley"--which as a Hollywood and highly romanticized view of these people.
All in all, one of Robeson's best films because he plays not a black man but a man--and a heck of a man at that.
While it may be stretching credibility to place Robeson in this setting, off the screen he developed a long-standing affinity with the people of Wales which lasted throughout his lifetime, and this was the one film he made of which he was truly proud. Whether singing Deep River' with the choir, or working underground with his comrades from the village, he fits in just fine. There is a strong number of character actors in support. Little seen but unlike any other film, The Proud Valley' is a fine testament both to British film-making and the huge community spirit of the Valleys.
It is full of wonderful, humane performances, has very exciting and exceptionally well-realized scenes of underground peril in the coal mines of South Wales (when we had such long-forgotten things as mines), and a social conscience clearly influenced by the Soviet workers' epics of the period. Add to the mix a degree of seriousness in the treatment of the lives and problems of working-class communities, and of the real-life Welsh experience, and also of the experience of blacks in the workplace, and one has an English-produced film probably unique in its period for the range of its sympathies. The coming war obviously put the English of the time on their honour!
Oh, yes - and the singing is very special, too!
Of course, worker-manager relations are idealised to a degree, but not so much as to suppress quite a number of uncomfortable truths, that must have had smug metropolitan audiences of the period squirming in their seats. Altogether, a much truer, and therefore finer, treatment of the Welsh mining experience than anything to be found in that overblown, overhyped confection, 'How green was my valley'.
Naturally, this excellent early Ealing feature is not generally available to the domestic market in Britain.
However, since we know the value of these things in Wales, I understand that our Sales Department at The National Library of Wales is usually able to supply individual video copies of the film! Interested parties should make enquires directly to that institution.
The Festival of films featuring Paul Robeson, of which the above is the first, continues in association with Aberystwyth Arts Centre Cinema until the 15th of July, 2003. The unreserved tickets are free. An interesting linked exhibition at The National Library of Wales, 'Let Paul Robeson Sing!', continues 'til the 25th of October 2003. The admission to this is also free.
I'm sure this information will be of interest to IMDB patrons.
Consequently, Robeson, in the guise of a discharged American seaman, fetches up in a South wales mining village, where he is a valuable recruit to the local choir. Unfortunately, a disaster closes the mine, and a group of the miners (including Robeson, of course), march down to London to try and persuade the colliery bosses to let them find a way round the blocked section. As they march, a succession of newspaper posters chart the events leading to the outbreak of war.
This is an echo of the pre-war hunger marches - but in this situation, a clever narrative device is used, for no-one is to blame for them being out of work. As a result, the bosses and workers are later seen working together, trying to reopen a pit that is strategically valuable to the war effort.
Of course, the plan eventually boils down to detonating an explosive charge that is, in effect, a suicidal act. Robeson knocks out the miner who has drawn the short straw and sacrifices himself. Just as the soldier on the battlefield, the miner sometimes has to lay down his life for his friends. (Mining in wartime Britain was a reserved occupation.)
There is hardly any reference to colour prejudice in this film, and full use is made of Robeson's fine singing voice.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe film originally ended with the miners taking over the mine, but the onset of World War ll changed this.
- Citas
Emlyn Parry: Lovely, everything's going to be all right soon.
Gwen Owen: Not if you keep on getting into scraps all the time.
Emlyn Parry: You like a bit of a scrap yourself don't you.
Gwen Owen: You'll know more about that when we're married my boy. I'll be ready to take you on any day.
Emlyn Parry: Not in my working clothes, eh?
Gwen Owen: Don't talk soft out here, Em.
- Créditos curiososOpening credits prologue: South Wales 1938
- ConexionesFeatured in Arena: Cinema (1977)
Selecciones populares
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 16min(76 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1