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6.7/10
668
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A strong-willed teacher, determined to educate the poor and illiterate youth of an impoverished Welsh village, discovers one student whom she believes to have the seeds of genius in him.A strong-willed teacher, determined to educate the poor and illiterate youth of an impoverished Welsh village, discovers one student whom she believes to have the seeds of genius in him.A strong-willed teacher, determined to educate the poor and illiterate youth of an impoverished Welsh village, discovers one student whom she believes to have the seeds of genius in him.
- Nominated for 2 Primetime Emmys
- 2 nominations total
Toyah Willcox
- Bessie Watty
- (as Toyah Wilcox)
Robbin John
- Ivor
- (as Robin John)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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I remember watching this many years ago and to this day I am quite taken by the performances given. While it was a "Made for TV" movie, to this day it still leaves an impression. The musical score by John Barry was quite good and added to the film in a superb way as well.
Kate Hepburn is surely missed as she was a great actress. She led up an overall fine cast of actors that provided a lasting impression. The young man who she tutored out of an otherwise menial existence was a great actor too.
I only wish that more such productions were still made today.
I guess that the only thing that gets the green light are reality shows that are soon forgotten.
Kate Hepburn is surely missed as she was a great actress. She led up an overall fine cast of actors that provided a lasting impression. The young man who she tutored out of an otherwise menial existence was a great actor too.
I only wish that more such productions were still made today.
I guess that the only thing that gets the green light are reality shows that are soon forgotten.
I usually hate remakes...particularly of movies that were well done in the first place. This is why I resisted watching the 1979 version of "The Corn is Green" for many years. After all, the Bette Davis version is terrific. However, in hindsight, I am thrilled I saw both films...and both are about equally exceptional.
Lilly Moffat (Hepburn) has just inherited her uncle's home in rural Wales. After witnessing the hard life of a typical resident, she feels a burning passion to educate these illiterate folk. So, she turns her home into a school and soon kids come flooding to the school. However, she soon meets an adult who, despite no formal schooling, shows lots of promise.
The rest of the story is about their relationship and her drive to get Morgan to strive for something more out of life.
The acting is THE major reason to see this film. Like Bette Davis, Hepburn is a treasure to watch and the lovely Welsh countryside (something not in the original film) is a major plus. Well worth seeing and a truly unique story that is really something special.
Lilly Moffat (Hepburn) has just inherited her uncle's home in rural Wales. After witnessing the hard life of a typical resident, she feels a burning passion to educate these illiterate folk. So, she turns her home into a school and soon kids come flooding to the school. However, she soon meets an adult who, despite no formal schooling, shows lots of promise.
The rest of the story is about their relationship and her drive to get Morgan to strive for something more out of life.
The acting is THE major reason to see this film. Like Bette Davis, Hepburn is a treasure to watch and the lovely Welsh countryside (something not in the original film) is a major plus. Well worth seeing and a truly unique story that is really something special.
If you've seen the 1945 version of The Corn is Green, you haven't really seen it in its full potential. Bette Davis can play a spinster extremely well, but she can't get enthused like Katharine Hepburn can. In Emlyn Williams's story, a strong woman sets up a school in a Welsh mining town. She finds potential in one particular young boy and hopes an education will give him a chance at a different life. When Katharine Hepburn encourages her student, she raises her fists in the air and grins triumphantly. It's a much more understandable interpretation of her character; the woman obviously has passion enough to educate lost-cause mining children, so she should show her passion in her delivery and mannerisms. Kate was nominated for an Emmy that year, but was ironically beat out by Bette Davis for Strangers: The Story of a Mother and a Daughter.
In his first film, Ian Saynor gives a wonderfully emotive performance as the conflicted student. From start to finish, the audience sees his growth and maturity, and we learn to put as much faith and hope in his character as Kate does.
While David Walker's costumes are beautiful, John Barry's music cheapens the quality of the film, making it obvious that it was made for television. If you can get past the soundtrack, though, you're in for a very well-acted and interesting story.
In his first film, Ian Saynor gives a wonderfully emotive performance as the conflicted student. From start to finish, the audience sees his growth and maturity, and we learn to put as much faith and hope in his character as Kate does.
While David Walker's costumes are beautiful, John Barry's music cheapens the quality of the film, making it obvious that it was made for television. If you can get past the soundtrack, though, you're in for a very well-acted and interesting story.
A enlightened story that began with Bette Davis's 1945 first version in a near masterpiece in my point of view, this remake with the classy Katherine Hepburn as TV movie stays few steps behind, but it isn't necessarily far away from of his predecessor at all, Kathy overcame fulsomely a putative weak points, with a masterful performance, she plays an unmarried wise old woman who moved to north Wales and decided open a small school for miners boys who were send to coal mines at tender age without any kind of study or future at sight on those hard times, Mrs. Moffat (Hepburn) realizes that a rough teenage Morgan Evans (Ian Saynor) has a special gift to write prodigal poems, she foresees on the boy a glittering future if her coax him an extensive study, Morgan under a extreme pressure stays drained and willing to quit, Mrs. Moffat doesn't give up and she gets to him run for a scholarship at Oxford University, somehow Mrs. Moffat being a spinster, wager all her hopes in this orphan gift boy as was your own son, moreover although she treats Morgan harshly ,actually she intents that him has a opportunity to be someone, that it's her main target, if he got, she made something for yourself, a movie that letting us to think that nothing was lost for mankind in this vale of tears!!
Resume:
First watch: 2020 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 8.25
Resume:
First watch: 2020 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 8.25
10connimac
One of the great Kate's best performances of her later years. I liked the Bette Davis version very much, but Hepburn does so much more in the character. The story is hopeful and the ending not "pat". The characters are fleshed out nicely and the direction is truly fine. I am a big fan of Katherine Hepburn and she truly comes alive in this character. The supporting cast manage not to be overwhelmed by their leading lady's performance and round out their characters as I believe the author intended them to evolve. I find it sad that really good made for television movies are dismissed out of hand and forgotten so easily, there are so very FEW of them, but the GOOD ones deserve a place in film history. This is one of the best I have ever seen! I beg the powers that be to release it on DVD!
Did you know
- TriviaThe scene in which Katharine Hepburn's character is riding up a hill on a bicycle was intended to be shot with a stunt double, but Hepburn insisted on doing it herself. After she fell off the bicycle several times, she overheard a crew member say, "God, she got old." She approached him, said, "You're right. I have", signaled for the stunt double to take over, and went back to her hotel.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 31st Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1979)
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By what name was Le blé est encore vert (1979) officially released in Canada in English?
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