Thursday, May 30, 2019
Far and Away :: essays research papers
Far and Away fades in with a slow fly-over tool of a crashing Atlantic Ocean on a partly sunny day, off the coast of what could not be mistaken for anywhere but Ireland. The wide-angled strike continues, and the film title emerges as the camera lifts up and over the craggy cliffs and shoreline of rural Ireland our sense of place reinforced by a backing of well-to-do Celtic flute music. The opening credits continue to roll as the camera glides over a lush green, hilly landscape, accented by lately afternoon silhouettes of the partial cloud cover, and perhaps best described by Carolyn James in her review as picturesque in the manner of an Irish Spring soap commercial. Gradually, what we assume to be a late 19th century Irish village comes into view, characterized by a handful of key stone buildings, narrow carriage roads, and stone walls. The camera view switches to brief shot of the passageway level in the village, the music replaced by the bustle of the mundane activities of t he townspeople, before taking us into the local pub. It should be noted here that from street level, this village does not much resemble the romantic vision of the like village provided by the aerial shot. Even in such a short shot, the village get alongs more urban than it probably should, and if not for the natural light, would not differ greatly from the scenes of urban Boston later in the film.It is in the pub that we first meet Josephs father (Joe) and a friend (McGuire) who appear to be perpetuating stereotypes by sharing a drink (or two) in the middle of the day and singing a favourite drinking refrain before beingness summoned to the street by a local to protest the arrival of a rent collecting protestant landlord. The camera scrambles to follow the protest out into the street as the villagers yell and throw debris at the landlords carriage and horses. Here the early comedic groundwork of the film is set as the scene fundamentally stops to allow Joe to blurt out a semi-dr unken slurred barb toward the landlord, to which McGuire responds with a coy smile and a sarcastic You told him type response. The protest resumes (or, at least the film refocuses on the protest), and in the chaos of the landlord trying to escape the villagers, his horses and/or carriage knock over some sort of infrastructure (it is quite unclear what actually happens here) which falls on, and injuries Joe gravely.
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