A can’t-miss idea that self-sabotages by striving for originality when the old tropes are just what’s needed. It’s 1916, with more than a year of war on the continent as seen from a Yorkshire Mill Town where even their prestigious/well-funded local choral society feels the pinch of conscription decimating the ranks of tenors & baritones. Now the music director is enlisting. With few options, mill-owner/fading lead tenor Roger Allam (beyond praise) has little choice but to hire musically qualified, but ostracized Germanophile Ralph Fiennes for the position. (He’s also a single man of ‘peculiar tendencies,’ as it was put at the time.) Fiennes immediately starts recruiting any & all classes all over town, from bakery boy to disabled/still convalescing vets to sing, as well as settling on Sir Edward Elgar’s then little known oratorio THE DREAM OF GERONTIUS in lieu of the usual Bach, Beethoven or Brahms; all uncomfortably German.* The film all but running itself in these early scenes, written & played with unexpected tartness, LOL personal putdowns, and gossipy chorister queens kibbitzing from the sidelines. With a fierce, almost proud, local rudeness staunching sentimentality, even the telegraph messenger boy delivers his death notices with dispatch before riding to the next choral rehearsal; sacred and profane juxtaposition in the form of cheeky gallows humor and hopes of shagging a young, newly widowed soprano after practise. Scripter Alan Bennett, now in his nineties, at his best here, and as the tone shifts when a one-armed/disabled vet* comes home to a wife’s disappointment and an offer to use his fresh tenor voice to oust Allam from his usual lead spot. After this, something goes seriously wrong with Bennett’s ideas. Revising/downsizing the oratorio to fit resources; repurposing the poem as dramatic tableaux that comments on the war in ways more 1960s than 1916; bringing in Elgar not for a nervous opening night, but for suspense (will he let the show go on in this radical form?). Everything stops ringing true to the times. A nice coda returns to form as more young men leave for the war, and the film has an impressive offhand period look. But Elgar, who wore his musical sentiment on his sleeve, would have mourned how Bennett's script and Nicholas Hytner's direction turn chilly in the third act.
SCREWY THOUGHT OF THE DAY: *At the time, GERONTIUS had yet to achieve its current standing. Four major recordings released in the last two years, the most recent featuring just the sort of amateur choir, The Huddersfield Choral Society, this film’s group emulates. Founded in 1836, Huddersfield also recorded the first complete GERONTIUS in 1945.
ATTENTION MUST BE PAID: *Jacob Dudman, the returning one-armed vet who sings Gerontius, appears to be doing his own vocals. It’s a killer part so congrats . . . if he is.









