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Friday, May 16, 2008

CROMWELL (1970)

A big cast & big production values can’t hide the amateurish level of Ken Hughes’ script & megging on this perplexing bio-pic on Britain’s radical constitutionalist. Richard Harris plays an unsympathetic, dour & knowingly hypocritical Cromwell (all within the bounds of possibilities), but has no balancing vision that allows us to see how he won his battles (political & military) & overthrew a monarchy; he’s a man for no seasons. Alec Guinness does better as Charles I in a forcefully restrained perf goosed along w/ small unexpected surges of emotion (a farewell kiss to the Queen, a mistimed eruption at court, etc.). There’s typically fine support from the usual quality Brit players, especially Robert Morley & Timothy Dalton, but Hughes always gives us too little or too much. There's certainly too much of the overly prominent musical score which takes the form of a lively & loud cantata.

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