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{{Short description|1958 British film directed by Ronald Neame}}
{{EngvarB|date=September 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2024}}
{{Infobox film
{{Infobox film
| name = The Horse's Mouth
| name = The Horse's Mouth
| image = The_Horses_Mouth_poster_US.jpg
| image = The_Horses_Mouth_poster_US.jpg
| caption = The Horse's Mouth US Theatrical Poster
| caption = The Horse's Mouth US Theatrical Poster by [[Nicola Simbari]]
| director = [[Ronald Neame]]
| director = [[Ronald Neame]]
| producer = [[John Bryan (art director)|John Bryan]]
| producer = [[John Bryan (art director)|John Bryan]]<br>Ronald Neame
| writer = [[Alec Guinness]]<br>[[Joyce Cary]] (novel)
| based_on = {{based on|''[[The Horse's Mouth]]''<br>1944 novel|[[Joyce Cary]]}}
| starring = Alec Guinness<br>[[Kay Walsh]]<br>[[Renee Houston]]<br>[[Mike Morgan (actor)|Mike Morgan]]<br>[[Robert Coote]]
| screenplay = [[Alec Guinness]]
| starring = Alec Guinness<br>[[Kay Walsh]]<br>[[Renée Houston]]<br>[[Mike Morgan (actor)|Mike Morgan]]<br>[[Robert Coote]]
| music = Adapted from [[Sergei Prokofiev]]'s "[[Lieutenant Kijé (Prokofiev)|Lieutenant Kijé]]"
| music = Arranged and adapted from [[Sergei Prokofiev]]'s "[[Lieutenant Kijé (Prokofiev)|Lieutenant Kijé]]" by [[Kenneth V. Jones]]
| cinematography = [[Arthur Ibbetson]]
| cinematography = [[Arthur Ibbetson]]
| editing = [[Anne V. Coates]]
| editing = [[Anne V. Coates]]
| distributor = [[General Film Distributors]]
| distributor = [[General Film Distributors]]
| released = {{start date|1958||}}
| released = {{Film date|1958|11|11|df=yes}}
| runtime = 97 minutes
| runtime = 97 minutes
| country = United Kingdom
| country = United Kingdom
| language = English
| language = English
| budget =
| budget =
| gross = $1 million (est. US/Canada rentals)<ref>"1959: Probable Domestic Take", ''Variety'', 6 January 1960 p 34</ref>
}}
}}
'''''The Horse's Mouth''''' is a [[1958 in film|1958 film]] directed by [[Ronald Neame]]. [[Alec Guinness]] wrote the screenplay from the 1944 [[novel]] ''[[The Horse's Mouth]]'' by [[Joyce Cary]], and also played the lead role of Gulley Jimson, a [[London]] artist.
'''''The Horse's Mouth''''' is a 1958 British film directed by [[Ronald Neame]] and starring [[Alec Guinness]], [[Kay Walsh]] and [[Renée Houston]].<ref name="BFIsearch">{{Cite web |title=The Horse's Mouth |url=https://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web/Details/ChoiceFilmWorks/150036946 |access-date=10 June 2024 |publisher=British Film Institute}}</ref> The screenplay was by [[Alec Guinness]] based on the 1944 novel ''[[The Horse's Mouth]]'' by [[Joyce Cary]]. It was produced by [[John Bryan (art director)|John Bryan]] and Neame and filmed in [[Technicolor]].


==Synopsis==
==Plot==
The film begins with the release of the eccentric painter Gulley Jimson ([[Alec Guinness]]) from a one-month jail sentence for telephone harassment of his sponsor, Mr Hickson ([[Ernest Thesiger]]). Nosey Barbon ([[Mike Morgan (actor)|Mike Morgan]]), who wants to be a protégé of Jimson, greets Jimson at [[Wormwood Scrubs]], but Jimson tries to discourage Nosey from pursuing painting for a living. Jimson makes off with Nosey's bike to make his way back to his houseboat, which Coker, an older lady friend, has been attending in Jimson's absence.
Eccentric painter Gulley Jimson is released from a one-month jail sentence for telephone harassment of his sponsor, Mr. Hickson. Nosey Barbon, who wants to be Jimson's protégé, greets Jimson at [[HM Prison Wormwood Scrubs]], but Jimson tries to discourage Nosey from pursuing painting for a living. Jimson goes to his houseboat, which his older lady friend Coker has been maintaining in his absence.


Jimson tries to borrow money from Hickson and Coker ([[Kay Walsh]]), but Hickson sets the police to trace the phone call back to Jimson. Jimson and Coker later visit Hickson to try to secure advance payment for the early Jimson works. However, after Jimson has tried to steal works from Hickson's place and Coker has stopped him, Hickson and his secretary have called the police to have them ejected. Jimson breaks a window, and he and Coker escape out the servant's entrance.
Jimson tries to borrow money from Hickson and Coker. Jimson and Coker later visit Hickson to secure payment for Jimson's artwork. Jimson tries to steal works back from Hickson's place, but Coker stops him. Hickson calls the police, but Jimson and Coker escape.


Jimson follows up on a note from A. W. Alabaster ([[Arthur Macrae]]), secretary to Sir William ([[Robert Coote]]) and Lady Beeder ([[Veronica Turleigh]]), who are interested in acquiring early Jimson works. One of the early works is in the possession of Jimson's ex-wife, Sara Monday ([[Renee Houston]]). Jimson and Coker try to secure an agreement with Sara Monday to obtain that early painting, but are unsuccessful.
Jimson responds to a note from A.W. Alabaster, secretary to Sir William and Lady Beeder, who are interested in acquiring Jimson's early works. Jimson and Coker try to secure one of those works from Sara Monday, Jimson's ex-wife, but she turns them down.


When Jimson visits the Beeders, he sees a blank wall in their residence, and is immediately inspired to paint "The Raising of Lazarus". He learns that the Beeders are leaving for 6 weeks, and takes advantage of their absence to execute the painting. An old artistic rival, Abel, a sculptor, intrudes on Jimson to bring in a large block of concrete to fulfill a sculpture commission for British Rail. In the process, Jimson pawns the Beeder's valuables, and Abel ([[Michael Gough]]) and Jimson inadvertently destroy part of the Beeder's floor when the concrete is accidentally dropped whilst suspended. After Jimson has completed the painting, the Beeders return, and after their shock at seeing the painting, they walk towards it and fall through the hole on a carpet that had covered the hole.
When Jimson visits the Beeders, he sees a blank wall in their residence and is inspired to paint ''The Raising of Lazarus''. He learns that the Beeders are leaving for six weeks and takes advantage of their absence to execute the painting. An old artistic rival, Abel, intrudes on Jimson to bring in a large block of marble to fulfil a sculpture commission for British Rail. Jimson pawns the Beeders' valuables, and Abel and Jimson accidentally destroy part of the Beeders' floor when the marble is dropped. After Jimson has completed the painting, the Beeders return. Shocked by the painting, they fall through the hole in the floor.


When Jimson returns to his houseboat, he sees Coker there. She was fired from her barmaid job after her name got into the papers following the incident at Hickson's residence, and has nowhere else to live. Later that evening, she tells him that Hickson is dead, which surprises Jimson. She also says that Hickson has bequeathed his collection of Jimson's works "to the nation". Those works are displayed at the [[Tate]] Gallery, which Jimson himself visits. In the long line to the exhibit, Jimson sees Sara Monday. He then maneuvers to try to recover that one early work still in her possession. She seems to agree, and gives Jimson a roll tube. When he arrives back at the houseboat, however, Coker and Nosey see that the roll contains only toilet paper, without the painting there. Jimson returns quickly back to Sara's house, with Nosey following him. Jimson and Sara struggle for the painting, and in the struggle, Sara falls backwards and knocks herself out. Jimson and Nosey escape the scene.
Jimson returns to his houseboat and finds Coker there. She was fired from her barmaid job after the press reported the incident at Hickson's residence. Later that evening, she surprises Jimson with the news that Hickson is dead and that he has bequeathed his collection of Jimson's works "to the nation." Those works are displayed at the [[Tate]] Gallery, which Jimson visits. In the long queue for the exhibit, Jimson sees Sara. He again attempts to regain the piece in her possession, and she gives him a roll tube. When he returns to the houseboat, Coker and Nosey find that the roll contains only toilet paper. Nosey follows Jimson to Sara's house, where Sara is knocked unconscious when Jimson grabs the painting.


Afterwards, Jimson and Nosey seek shelter in an abandoned church. Nosey then sees the side of the building, a totally blank wall, and points it out to Jimson. Jimson is immediately inspired to execute his largest work, "The Last Judgement". Finding out that the church is condemned to be torn down within a fortnight, Jimson, Nosey and Coker recruit local youngsters to help with completing the painting, to the objections of the local council official who is to oversee the building's demolition. Jimson even recruits Lady Beeder to participate, in spite of the injuries caused to her after Jimson's and Abel's actions in their residence. The painting is completed on the scheduled day of demolition. After the demolition crew warns everyone to stand back, a bulldozer comes crashing through the wall and destroys the painting. Jimson himself drove the bulldozer, feeling it necessary to destroy the work before anyone else does. As Jimson's admirers pelt the council official and demolition crew in protest, Jimson runs back to his boat and sets sail down the Thames, before Nosey and Coker can stop him.
Jimson and Nosey seek shelter in an abandoned church. Jimson is immediately inspired to execute his largest work, ''The Last Judgment'', on a blank wall. Learning that the church is to be torn down within a fortnight, Jimson, Nosey and Coker recruit local youngsters to help complete the painting. A local council official overseeing the building's demolition objects to their activities. Jimson recruits Lady Beeder to participate. The painting is completed on the scheduled day of demolition. After the demolition crew warns everyone to stand back, Jimson suddenly drives a bulldozer through the wall, feeling it necessary to destroy the work before anyone else did. Jimson runs back to his boat and sets sail down the [[River Thames|Thames]] before Nosey and Coker can stop him.

==Cast==
* [[Alec Guinness]] as Gulley Jimson
* [[Kay Walsh]] as Miss D. Coker
* [[Renée Houston]] as Sara Monday
* [[Mike Morgan (actor)|Mike Morgan]] as Nosey
* [[Robert Coote]] as Sir William Beeder
* [[Arthur Macrae]] as A. W. Alabaster
* [[Veronica Turleigh]] as Lady Beeder
* [[Michael Gough]] as Abel [Bisson]
* [[Reginald Beckwith]] as Captain Jones
* [[Ernest Thesiger]] as Hickson
* [[Richard Caldicot]] as Roberts (Hickson's butler)
* [[Richard Leech]] as Hodges (porter in flats)
* John Kidd as pawnbroker
* Gillian Vaughan as Lollie


==Production==
==Production==
The film featured an [[Academy Awards|Academy Award]]-nominated screenplay by actor Alec Guinness. Guinness' screenplay generally follows the book it was based on, but Guinness focused on Jimson's character and what it means to be an artist, rather than the social and political themes the book explored. He also deviates from the book's ending, where Jimson had suffered a stroke and was no longer able to paint.
The film's [[Academy Awards|Academy Award]]-nominated screenplay, written by Alec Guinness, generally follows the book upon which it was based. However, the screenplay focuses on Jimson's character and the life of an artist rather than on the social and political themes that the book explores. It also deviates from the book's ending, in which Jimson suffers a stroke and is no longer able to paint.


The [[expressionist]]ic "Jimson" paintings featured in the film were actually the work of [[John Bratby]], a member of the English provincial realists artist known as the [[Kitchen sink realism|Kitchen Sink]] school.
The [[expressionist]]ic paintings featured in the film are actually the work of [[John Bratby]], a member of the English provincial realist artist group known as the [[Kitchen sink realism|kitchen sink]] school. To prepare for the film, Guinness observed Bratby at work in his home studio.<ref name="Neame">Neame, Ronald, and Barbara Roisman Cooper. ''Straight from the Horse's Mouth'', Volume 98 of Scarecrow Filmmakers Series. Rowman & Littlefield, 2003. 160–1.</ref>


Mike Morgan fell ill with [[meningitis]] shortly before filming ended and died before its completion. As a result, another actor dubbed many of Morgan's lines.<ref>{{cite news | author=Matthew Sweet | title=Ronald Neame (2003 interview at the National Film Theatre) | url=http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/interviews/neame.html | work=British Film Institute | date=19 October 2003 | accessdate=2008-01-11}}</ref>
Mike Morgan fell ill with [[meningitis]] shortly before filming ended and died before its completion. As a result, another actor dubbed many of Morgan's lines.<ref>{{cite news | author=Matthew Sweet | title=Ronald Neame (2003 interview at the National Film Theatre) | url=http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/interviews/neame.html | publisher=British Film Institute | date=19 October 2003 | access-date=11 January 2008 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080314011214/http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/interviews/neame.html | archive-date=14 March 2008 }}</ref>


Director Ronald Neame visited author Joyce Cary, who was dying from bone cancer. Cary requested that his son [[Tristram Cary|Tristram]], who had previously scored Guinness' ''[[The Ladykillers (1955 film)|The Ladykillers]],'' be contracted to write the film's [[Film score|score]]. Neame conveyed to Tristram Cary that he wanted "something jaunty and cocky" in the manner of [[Sergei Prokofiev|Sergei Prokoviev's]] ''[[Lieutenant Kijé (Prokofiev)|Lieutenant Kijé]]''.<ref name="Neame" /> The score was [[Arrangement|arranged]] by [[Kenneth V. Jones]].
==Cast==
{| class="wikitable" width="50%"
|- bgcolor="#CCCCCC"
! Actor !! Role
|-
|[[Alec Guinness]] || Gulley Jimson
|-
|[[Kay Walsh]] || Miss D. Coker
|-
|[[Renee Houston]] || Sara Monday
|-
|[[Mike Morgan (actor)|Mike Morgan]] || Nosey
|-
|[[Robert Coote]] || Sir William Beeder
|-
|[[Arthur Macrae]] || A.W. Alabaster
|-
|[[Veronica Turleigh]] || Lady Beeder
|-
|[[Michael Gough]] || Abel
|-
|[[Reginald Beckwith]] || Capt. Jones
|-
|[[Ernest Thesiger]] || Hickson
|-
|[[Gillian Vaughan]] || Lollie
|}
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:The Horses Mouth Guinness3.jpg|thumb|250px|center|'''Alec Guinness''' as the fictional artist Gulley Jimson]] -->


==Critical reception==
==Criticism==
The film, which received rave reviews in the UK after its [[Royal Command Performance]],<ref>{{cite magazine|title='Horse's Mouth' Wows Royal Film Gala|magazine=Variety |date=4 February 1959|page=3|url=http://www.archive.org/stream/variety213-1959-02#page/n2/mode/1up|access-date=4 July 2019|via=[[Internet Archive]]}}</ref> has been named by one critic as "[q]uite probably the best film ever made about a painter."<ref>[http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/horses_mouth/ Rotten Tomatoes.com, The Horse's Mouth (1958), Ken Hanke – Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)]</ref>
This film has been characterized as "one of the best films ever about a painter".<ref>[http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/horses_mouth/ Rotten Tomatoes.com, The Horse's Mouth (1958), Ken Hanke - Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)]</ref> Scott Weinberg of the "Apollo Guide" describes Guinness’ performance as "a devilishly enjoyable character study" that "ranges from ‘mildly dishevelled’ to ‘tragically exhausted’" and also praises Ronald Neame's direction.<ref>[http://www.apolloguide.com/mov_fullrev.asp?CID=4395 The Apollo Guide, "The Horses Mouth" review, by Scott Weinberg]</ref> Henry Goodman has written of the idea of the artist as destroyer with reference to this film.<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0015-1386(195921)12%3A3%3C44%3ATHM%3E2.0.CO%3B2-C | last=Goodman | first=Henry | title=Film Reviews: ''The Horse's Mouth'' | journal=Film Quarterly | volume=12 | issue=3 | pages=44–46 | date=Spring 1959 | accessdate=2008-01-11 }}</ref>

''[[The Monthly Film Bulletin]]'' wrote: "Joyce Cary's novel, with its great central character, its comedy, passion and overflowing vitality, could not easily be confined; within conventional screen limits. Alec Guinness, John Bryan and Ronald Neame are to be respected for what they have tried to do; i but the essence of the novel eludes them. Guinness makes a brilliantly clever and consistent character study out of Gulley Jimson – rasping voice, shuffling little run, flashes of dignity and pathos alternating with the slapstick impudence. As Gulley the rogue he convinces, but as Gulley the artist something is missing. Kay Walsh and Renee Houston, as the square, defiant Coker and the yielding Sarah, are true to the novel's spirit. But several minor characters (the Beeders, the retired sailor who guards the houseboat) are taken too far towards caricature; and too many of Gulley's adventures have been translated into a sort of Ealing-style anarchism. Sometimes funny in their own right, though rather slackly directed by Ronald Neame, these scenes further weaken emphasis on the all-important fact that Gulley's story is that of creative force rather than lovable eccentricity. The picaresque ending – in the novel, Gulley is crushed when the wall falls on top of him – marks a further concession. ''The Horse's Mouth'' remains a brave venture; but beside the novel it looks very small."<ref>{{Cite journal |date=1 January 1959 |title=The Horse's Mouth |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/1305820560 |journal=[[The Monthly Film Bulletin]] |volume=26 |issue=300 |pages=29 |id={{ProQuest|1305820560}} |via=ProQuest}}</ref>

Scott Weinberg of the Apollo Guide described Guinness' performance as "a devilishly enjoyable character study" that "ranges from 'mildly dishevelled' to 'tragically exhausted{{'"}} and also praised Neame's direction.<ref>[http://www.apolloguide.com/mov_fullrev.asp?CID=4395 The Apollo Guide, "The Horse's Mouth" review, by Scott Weinberg] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927002153/http://www.apolloguide.com/mov_fullrev.asp?CID=4395 |date=27 September 2007 }}</ref>

A contemporary ''[[Film Quarterly]]'' review by Henry Goodman identified the film's predominant theme of the artist as destroyer and praised the Gulley Jimson character as "a fine realization of the absurdities as well as the idealisms of the creative life."<ref>{{cite journal | last=Goodman | first=Henry | title=Film Reviews: ''The Horse's Mouth'' | journal=Film Quarterly | volume=12 | issue=3 | pages=44–46 | date=Spring 1959 | doi=10.2307/3185983 | jstor=3185983}}</ref>

==See also==
* [[The Rebel (1961 film)|''The Rebel'']]


==References==
==References==
Line 75: Line 78:


==External links==
==External links==
*{{imdb title|id=0051739|title=The Horse's Mouth}}
* {{IMDb title|0051739}}
* {{tcmdb title|id=78402}}
* {{Amg movie|23184|The Horse's Mouth}}
* {{AFI film|id=52592|title=The Horse's Mouth}}
*[http://www.criterion.com/asp/release.asp?id=154&eid=223&section=essay Criterion Collection essay by Bruce Eder]
*[http://www.criterion.com/asp/release.asp?id=154&eid=225&section=essay Criterion Collection essay by Ian Christie]
* [https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/208-the-horse-s-mouth ''The Horse's Mouth''] an essay by [[Ronald Neame]] at the [[Criterion Collection] * [https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/208-the-horse-s-mouth ''The Horse's Mouth''] an essay by [[Ronald Neame]] at the [[Criterion Collection

*[http://www.criterion.com/asp/release.asp?id=154&eid=226&section=essay Criterion Collection essay by Ronald Neame]
*[https://www.thehorsesmouth.co.uk '' [The Horse's Mouth''] – The Horse's mouth data analytics website – horse race cards]


{{Ronald Neame}}
{{Ronald Neame}}
Line 85: Line 90:
{{DEFAULTSORT:Horse's Mouth, The}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Horse's Mouth, The}}
[[Category:1958 films]]
[[Category:1958 films]]
[[Category:British films]]
[[Category:1950s screwball comedy films]]
[[Category:1950s comedy films]]
[[Category:British comedy films]]
[[Category:Screwball comedy films]]
[[Category:Films about fictional painters]]
[[Category:Films shot in Technicolor]]
[[Category:Films based on Irish novels]]
[[Category:Films based on novels]]
[[Category:Films directed by Ronald Neame]]
[[Category:Films directed by Ronald Neame]]
[[Category:Films produced by Ronald Neame]]

[[fr:De la bouche du cheval]]
[[Category:Films set in London]]
[[Category:1958 comedy films]]
[[it:La bocca della verità]]
[[Category:1950s English-language films]]
[[pt:The Horse's Mouth]]
[[Category:1950s British films]]
[[ru:Устами художника (фильм)]]

Latest revision as of 09:40, 22 December 2024

The Horse's Mouth
The Horse's Mouth US Theatrical Poster by Nicola Simbari
Directed byRonald Neame
Screenplay byAlec Guinness
Based onThe Horse's Mouth
1944 novel
by Joyce Cary
Produced byJohn Bryan
Ronald Neame
StarringAlec Guinness
Kay Walsh
Renée Houston
Mike Morgan
Robert Coote
CinematographyArthur Ibbetson
Edited byAnne V. Coates
Music byArranged and adapted from Sergei Prokofiev's "Lieutenant Kijé" by Kenneth V. Jones
Distributed byGeneral Film Distributors
Release date
  • 11 November 1958 (1958-11-11)
Running time
97 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1 million (est. US/Canada rentals)[1]

The Horse's Mouth is a 1958 British film directed by Ronald Neame and starring Alec Guinness, Kay Walsh and Renée Houston.[2] The screenplay was by Alec Guinness based on the 1944 novel The Horse's Mouth by Joyce Cary. It was produced by John Bryan and Neame and filmed in Technicolor.

Plot

[edit]

Eccentric painter Gulley Jimson is released from a one-month jail sentence for telephone harassment of his sponsor, Mr. Hickson. Nosey Barbon, who wants to be Jimson's protégé, greets Jimson at HM Prison Wormwood Scrubs, but Jimson tries to discourage Nosey from pursuing painting for a living. Jimson goes to his houseboat, which his older lady friend Coker has been maintaining in his absence.

Jimson tries to borrow money from Hickson and Coker. Jimson and Coker later visit Hickson to secure payment for Jimson's artwork. Jimson tries to steal works back from Hickson's place, but Coker stops him. Hickson calls the police, but Jimson and Coker escape.

Jimson responds to a note from A.W. Alabaster, secretary to Sir William and Lady Beeder, who are interested in acquiring Jimson's early works. Jimson and Coker try to secure one of those works from Sara Monday, Jimson's ex-wife, but she turns them down.

When Jimson visits the Beeders, he sees a blank wall in their residence and is inspired to paint The Raising of Lazarus. He learns that the Beeders are leaving for six weeks and takes advantage of their absence to execute the painting. An old artistic rival, Abel, intrudes on Jimson to bring in a large block of marble to fulfil a sculpture commission for British Rail. Jimson pawns the Beeders' valuables, and Abel and Jimson accidentally destroy part of the Beeders' floor when the marble is dropped. After Jimson has completed the painting, the Beeders return. Shocked by the painting, they fall through the hole in the floor.

Jimson returns to his houseboat and finds Coker there. She was fired from her barmaid job after the press reported the incident at Hickson's residence. Later that evening, she surprises Jimson with the news that Hickson is dead and that he has bequeathed his collection of Jimson's works "to the nation." Those works are displayed at the Tate Gallery, which Jimson visits. In the long queue for the exhibit, Jimson sees Sara. He again attempts to regain the piece in her possession, and she gives him a roll tube. When he returns to the houseboat, Coker and Nosey find that the roll contains only toilet paper. Nosey follows Jimson to Sara's house, where Sara is knocked unconscious when Jimson grabs the painting.

Jimson and Nosey seek shelter in an abandoned church. Jimson is immediately inspired to execute his largest work, The Last Judgment, on a blank wall. Learning that the church is to be torn down within a fortnight, Jimson, Nosey and Coker recruit local youngsters to help complete the painting. A local council official overseeing the building's demolition objects to their activities. Jimson recruits Lady Beeder to participate. The painting is completed on the scheduled day of demolition. After the demolition crew warns everyone to stand back, Jimson suddenly drives a bulldozer through the wall, feeling it necessary to destroy the work before anyone else did. Jimson runs back to his boat and sets sail down the Thames before Nosey and Coker can stop him.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

The film's Academy Award-nominated screenplay, written by Alec Guinness, generally follows the book upon which it was based. However, the screenplay focuses on Jimson's character and the life of an artist rather than on the social and political themes that the book explores. It also deviates from the book's ending, in which Jimson suffers a stroke and is no longer able to paint.

The expressionistic paintings featured in the film are actually the work of John Bratby, a member of the English provincial realist artist group known as the kitchen sink school. To prepare for the film, Guinness observed Bratby at work in his home studio.[3]

Mike Morgan fell ill with meningitis shortly before filming ended and died before its completion. As a result, another actor dubbed many of Morgan's lines.[4]

Director Ronald Neame visited author Joyce Cary, who was dying from bone cancer. Cary requested that his son Tristram, who had previously scored Guinness' The Ladykillers, be contracted to write the film's score. Neame conveyed to Tristram Cary that he wanted "something jaunty and cocky" in the manner of Sergei Prokoviev's Lieutenant Kijé.[3] The score was arranged by Kenneth V. Jones.

Critical reception

[edit]

The film, which received rave reviews in the UK after its Royal Command Performance,[5] has been named by one critic as "[q]uite probably the best film ever made about a painter."[6]

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Joyce Cary's novel, with its great central character, its comedy, passion and overflowing vitality, could not easily be confined; within conventional screen limits. Alec Guinness, John Bryan and Ronald Neame are to be respected for what they have tried to do; i but the essence of the novel eludes them. Guinness makes a brilliantly clever and consistent character study out of Gulley Jimson – rasping voice, shuffling little run, flashes of dignity and pathos alternating with the slapstick impudence. As Gulley the rogue he convinces, but as Gulley the artist something is missing. Kay Walsh and Renee Houston, as the square, defiant Coker and the yielding Sarah, are true to the novel's spirit. But several minor characters (the Beeders, the retired sailor who guards the houseboat) are taken too far towards caricature; and too many of Gulley's adventures have been translated into a sort of Ealing-style anarchism. Sometimes funny in their own right, though rather slackly directed by Ronald Neame, these scenes further weaken emphasis on the all-important fact that Gulley's story is that of creative force rather than lovable eccentricity. The picaresque ending – in the novel, Gulley is crushed when the wall falls on top of him – marks a further concession. The Horse's Mouth remains a brave venture; but beside the novel it looks very small."[7]

Scott Weinberg of the Apollo Guide described Guinness' performance as "a devilishly enjoyable character study" that "ranges from 'mildly dishevelled' to 'tragically exhausted'" and also praised Neame's direction.[8]

A contemporary Film Quarterly review by Henry Goodman identified the film's predominant theme of the artist as destroyer and praised the Gulley Jimson character as "a fine realization of the absurdities as well as the idealisms of the creative life."[9]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "1959: Probable Domestic Take", Variety, 6 January 1960 p 34
  2. ^ "The Horse's Mouth". British Film Institute. Retrieved 10 June 2024.
  3. ^ a b Neame, Ronald, and Barbara Roisman Cooper. Straight from the Horse's Mouth, Volume 98 of Scarecrow Filmmakers Series. Rowman & Littlefield, 2003. 160–1.
  4. ^ Matthew Sweet (19 October 2003). "Ronald Neame (2003 interview at the National Film Theatre)". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 March 2008. Retrieved 11 January 2008.
  5. ^ "'Horse's Mouth' Wows Royal Film Gala". Variety. 4 February 1959. p. 3. Retrieved 4 July 2019 – via Internet Archive.
  6. ^ Rotten Tomatoes.com, The Horse's Mouth (1958), Ken Hanke – Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)
  7. ^ "The Horse's Mouth". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 26 (300): 29. 1 January 1959. ProQuest 1305820560 – via ProQuest.
  8. ^ The Apollo Guide, "The Horse's Mouth" review, by Scott Weinberg Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Goodman, Henry (Spring 1959). "Film Reviews: The Horse's Mouth". Film Quarterly. 12 (3): 44–46. doi:10.2307/3185983. JSTOR 3185983.
[edit]