[rec.arts.movies.reviews] REVIEW: I KNOW WHERE I'M GOING

moriarty@tc.fluke.com (Jeff Meyer) (12/01/89)

			    I KNOW WHERE I'M GOING
			 A film review by Jeff Meyer
			  Copyright 1989 Jeff Meyer

[Seen at the Seattle International Film Festival]

I KNOW WHERE I'M GOING (Great Britain, 1945)
Director/Producer/Screenwriters: Michael Powell and Eric Pressburger
                                 (The Archers)
Cast: Wendy Hiller, Roger Livesey, Pamela Brown, Finlay Currie,
     Capt. C. W. R. Knight, Petula Clark, Valentine Dyall, Nancy Price,
     John Laurie, Jean Cadell

[Part of the TRIBUTE TO MICHAEL POWELL series]

     One of the first films that Powell & Pressburger produced under their
Archers emblem, this is a romantic comedy that works very well, due mainly to
casting (of both major and minor roles) and a decent script.  It also attempts
to capture a magical Scottish atmosphere in the bargain; it's a respectable
attempt, but it only seems to ferment at the very end of the picture.  However,
there is enough good work going on elsewhere in the picture to leave a
satisfying taste in one's mouth throughout its running time.

     Wendy Hiller plays Joan Webster, a strong, materialistic woman who has
finally manipulated her millionaire boss into marriage; before leaving for
Scotland to meet her fiance, Joan describes to her father how everything in her
life is going exactly as she had planned it to, and that this is the
culmination of her dreams.  Her father warns her that the best things in life
are often the ones which aren't planned, and of course he turns out to be right
by the end of the film.  (Fathers always are in films like this.)  While
waiting to get across the loch to the island castle owned by her fiance, Joan
meets a brace of eccentric characters who live in the area, including Roger
Livesey as Torquil, the local laird who has just returned from the war.  The two
begin to fall in love, with Joan's dreams of financial independence hindering
and the awful weather over the loch helping the budding relationship.  The
varied personalities and activities of the locals, along with the ruins of a
castle and its ancient curse on Torquil, keep I KNOW WHERE I'M GOING from
having any bare spots; and the performances of Hiller and Livesey make for a
very fine romance, indeed.

     According to Maltin, this isn't out on video yet; however, with the
continued interest in Powell & Pressburger's work, it may not be long before it
is available.  A solid romantic comedy with a bit more emphasis on the romance
than the comedy, and a feel distinctly different than, say, Capra or Lubitsch.

     [Bias Disclaimer:  I think Wendy Hiller was born to play Dorothy L. Sayers'
Harriet Vane, and I really haven't seen anyone else who's come close.]

                                        Moriarty, aka Jeff Meyer
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