Frank's Movie Log

Movie Reviews and commentary from a guy who loves movies.

How Green Was My Valley (1941)

Grade: B-

How Green Was My Valley (1941) Poster

Synopsis: The trials of a late 18th century Welsh coal-mining family.

How Green Was My Valley doesn’t start well. When it thrusts you into its world, with big panoramic shots, and narration describing the scenery, you’re bound to wonder why the film wasn’t shot in color. Then there’s the singing, which is also pretty jarring, and that still-present voice-over narration. You get used to these things though as the film unwinds, and by the halfway point you’re totally caught up in the film’s world.

That’s not to say the film still doesn’t have problems. Second billed Maureen O’Hara disappears for a good chunk of the film’s second half, and young Roddy McDowall doesn’t visibly age. The first issue isn’t that much of a problem, as it serves the story well, showing the once teeming family slowly falling apart, but the McDowall problem is more serious.

Without any dates on screen, there’s no real sense of time. McDowall’s character is injured, recovers, goes to school, graduates, goes to work, etc… but McDowall still looks like the same boy at the film’s opening. Have one, five, or ten years passed? While it’s not clear exactly how director John Ford could have mitigated this problem, it’s a problem nonetheless.

But even without a clear sense of time, the film works, largely because it so creates such a rich, lived-in world for its characters. How Green Was My Valley is a film that stays with you, as a memory as rich as any of your own, its characters and locations feel real.

Though not as good as Citizen Kane, or The Maltese Falcon, it’s easy to see why How Green Was My Valley beat them for the 1941 Academy Award for Best Picture. Its story of working-class Welsh people struggling through difficult and changing times was especially resonant given that England was, at that time, enduring German air raids during World War II. While that shouldn’t have factored into the voting process, it’s certainly understandable that it did.

Bottom Line: Though it gets off to a rough start, How Green Was My Valley ultimately proves to be an engrossing journey that stays with you.

(Last viewed on Thursday, March 13th 2008)

“How Green Was My Valley (1941)” was posted on March 18th, 2008 at 1:27 pm in Movie Reviews and John Ford. View this film's entry in the IMDb.

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