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Thursday, May 15, 2008

A CANTERBURY TALE (1944)

With its bizarre plot device (in a small town near Canterbury, young girls are attacked at night by the infamous ‘glueman’), amateurish American lead (John Sweet) and distractingly uneven pastoral score by Allan Gray, this typically eccentric WWII collaboration from Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger should be an easy write-off. Yet, even before its oddities become gentled with repeat viewings (something that happens with most of their pics), it develops an emotional ballast as everyone inexorably moves toward the Cathedral for an intensely moving last act with three of our four principals blessed with Canterbury epiphanies. You may feel one, too. Extra marks for Edwin Hillier’s stunning photography.

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