Howards End (film)
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Howards End | |
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Movie poster with Samuel West and Helena Bonham Carter |
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Directed by | James Ivory |
Produced by | Ismail Merchant |
Written by | Ruth Prawer Jhabvala (based on the novel by E. M. Forster) |
Starring | Emma Thompson Helena Bonham Carter Anthony Hopkins Vanessa Redgrave Prunella Scales |
Music by | Richard Robbins Percy Grainger (opening and end title) |
Cinematography | Tony Pierce-Roberts |
Editing by | Andrew Marcus |
Distributed by | Sony Pictures Classics (USA) Mayfair {UK) |
Release date(s) | March 13, 1992 1 May 1992 8 May 1992 28 May 1992 |
Running time | 140 min. |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | $ 8million (estimated) |
IMDb profile |
Howards End is a 1992 film adaptation of E.M. Forster's 1910 novel Howards End, a story of class relations in turn-of-the-20th-century England. The film was produced by Merchant Ivory Productions, their third adaptation of a Forster novel (following A Room with a View in 1985 and Maurice in 1987). The screenplay was written by Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, directed by James Ivory and produced by Ismail Merchant.
Contents |
[edit] Synopsis
The story takes place in England at the beginning of the twentieth century. It is about three families who represent three social classes: the Wilcoxes, who are rich Victorian capitalists and who represent the class that is displacing the aristocracy; the Schlegel sisters, who represent the enlightened bourgeois class; and the Basts who are the lower middle-class. Forster is clear, however, that the novel is 'not concerned with the very poor.' The film asks the question 'Who will inherit England?' and answers it through the ownership of the house, Howards End, as it passes from person to person.
At the start of the film, the younger sister, Helen (Helena Bonham Carter), rashly becomes engaged to the younger Wilcox son, Paul. The next day both realise their mistake and break it off but Helen has sent a letter to her family announcing their relationship. Her Aunt Juley (Prunella Scales) arrives at Howards End and so makes the Wilcox family aware of an engagement that the two young people would rather have kept from them. Later, when the Wilcox family takes a house near to the Schlegels in London, the older sister, Margaret (Emma Thompson), feels compelled to visit because of the social embarrassment of the previous year. She befriends the mother, Ruth Wilcox (Vanessa Redgrave). Ruth is descended from English yeoman stock and it is through her family that the Wilcoxes own Howards End, a house which she dearly loves and which is the symbol of rural England and English tradition. Over the course of a few months, the two women become close and Ruth sees in Margaret a kindred spirit. Hearing that the Schlegels are to be turned out of their apartment when their lease ends, and knowing she is soon to die due to an illness that she has kept from her family, Ruth bequeaths Howards End to Margaret. This causes great consternation for the Wilcoxes, who refuse to believe that Ruth was in her "right mind" or intended her home to go to a relative stranger. The Wilcoxes burn the piece of paper that Ruth's bequest is written on, and decide to keep her will secret. Because he knows that he has prevented the Schlegels from finding a home in Howards End, Henry Wilcox (Anthony Hopkins) offers to help Margaret find a new place to live. As a result, the two become close and Henry proposes. Margaret accepts. A parallel plotline involves the younger sister, Helen. Whilst the Schlegels are still living in the London flat, and about the same time as the Wilcoxes arrive in the neighbourhood, Helen attends a lecture about Beethoven and accidentally leaves the hall with an umbrella belonging to the clerk Leonard Bast (Samuel West). He follows her and calls at the house to retrieve it. Later, his wife Jackie finds the Schlegel's card in Leonard's possessions and is convinced he is having an affair. In a fit of jealousy she calls on the Schlegels but leaves after an embarrassing scene due partly to the sisters having forgotten Leonard after the umbrella incident. Leonard returns to the house to make an apology and during tea the sisters find that he has an ambition to better himself through the kind of literature and sentiments that they share. They begin a project to improve his lot, and take advice from Henry Wilcox about Leonard's financial situation. Henry advises that Leonard should leave his post at the insurance company because it is heading for a crash. Leonard does so but the advice is premature and he finds himself in a worse position and eventually unemployed. The two plotlines come together at the engagement party of Margaret Schlegel and Henry Wilcox. Helen has found the Basts starving and brings them to the party. Jackie Bast becomes drunk and she comes to the attention of Margaret, who approaches her with Henry to find out who she is. Jackie recognises Henry and it becomes clear that some years previously he has had an affair with her and that she had effectively to prostitute herself in order to survive. Humiliated, Henry breaks off the engagement but that evening he and Margaret are reconciled and she forgives his sexual impropriety and infidelity. She insists that Helen take the Basts away and refuses them help, in accordance with Henry's wishes and sense of pride. Because of this, the Schlegel sisters drift apart. Helen has spent time with Leonard and we see an idyllic moment spent on a boat in a romantic scene. After this, Helen drifts away from Margaret and stays in very distant contact with her, much to Margaret's puzzlement. After several months, Helen comes back for her possessions, intending to move to Germany for good. She asks if she can keep them at Howards End and stay there for the night, in order to avoid contact with everyone. However, it is revealed that she is pregnant with Leonard's child. He is not aware of this. When Henry Wilcox finds out, he insists that she cannot stay in the house, and that the man responsible must be found out and punished for dishonouring her. Margaret and Henry argue bitterly about the different standards of sexual propriety applied to men and women and Margaret says she is leaving Henry. Margaret, Leonard and the oldest Wilcox son Charles (James Wilby) all make their way separately to Howards End and the final tragedy unfolds. Ultimately, Ruth Wilcox's wish is fulfilled: Helen is eventually reconciled with Margaret who now owns Howards End, where Helen will raise her son as its heir. In both film and novel, the final ownership of Howards End is a symbol of new class relations in England: the wealth of the new industrialists (the Wilcoxes) married to the politically reforming vision of liberalism (the Schlegels) that will benefit the children of the lower classes.
[edit] Filming locations
Part of the movie was filmed at the Baltic Exchange, 30 St. Mary Axe, London. Soon after filming there it was bombed by the IRA, razed, and another building erected on its site. Other scenes were shot in the courtyard of the Founder's Building at Royal Holloway University, Egham, Surrey. [1] The "Howards End" house in the countryside is Peppard Cottage in Rotherfield Peppard, Oxfordshire, and the Wilcox's house is nearby [1].
[edit] Cast
- Anthony Hopkins - Henry Wilcox
- Vanessa Redgrave - Ruth Wilcox
- Helena Bonham Carter - Helen Schlegel
- Emma Thompson - Margaret Schlegel
- James Wilby - Charles Wilcox
- Samuel West - Leonard Bast
and
- Prunella Scales - Aunt Juley
with
- Jemma Redgrave - Evie Wilcox
- Adrian Ross Magenty - Tibby Schlegel
- Joseph Bennett - Paul Wilcox
- Susie Lindeman - Dolly Wilcox
- Nicola Duffett - Jacky Bast
- Mark Payton - Percy Cahill
- Jo Kendall - Annie
- Barbara Hicks - Miss Avery
- Peter Cellier - Col. Fussell
- Crispin Bonham-Carter - Albert Fussell
In real life, Prunella Scales (Aunt Juley) and Samuel West (Leonard Bast) mother and son.
[edit] Awards
[edit] Winner
- 1992 : Cannes Film Festival 45th Anniversary Prize (James Ivory)
- 1993 : Academy Awards
- Best Actress in a Leading Role (Emma Thompson)
- Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium (Ruth Prawer Jhabvala)
- Best Art Direction - Set Decoration (Luciana Arrighi, Ian Whittaker)
- 1993 : British Academy Film Award Best Actress (Emma Thompson)
- 1993 : British Academy Award Best Film (Ismail Merchant, James Ivory)
- 1993 : Golden Globe Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama (Emma Thompson)
[edit] Nominated
- 1993 Academy Award
- Best Picture (Ismail Merchant)
- Directing (James Ivory)
- Best Supporting Actress (Vanessa Redgrave)
- Best Cinematography (Tony Pierce-Roberts)
- Costume Design (Jenny Beavan, John Bright)
- Original Music Score (Richard Robbins)
- 1993 BAFTA
- Best Direction (James Ivory)
- Best Screenplay - Adapted (Ruth Prawer Jhabvala)
- Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Helena Bonham Carter)
- Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Samuel West)
- Best Cinematography (Tony Pierce-Roberts)
- Best Production Design (Luciana Arrighi)
- Best Costume Design (Jenny Beavan, John Bright)
- Best Editing (Andrew Marcus)
- Best Make Up Artist (Christine Beveridge)
- 1993 Golden Globe Award
- Best Director - Motion Picture (James Ivory)
- Best Motion Picture - Drama
- Best Screenplay - Motion Picture (Ruth Prawer Jhabvala)
- 1993 César Best Foreign Film (Meilleur film étranger) (James Ivory)
[edit] Other adaptations
A television adaptation of the novel was broadcast in 1970 with Leo Genn and Glenda Jackson.
[edit] External links
- Howards End, available at Project Gutenberg.
- Howards End at the Internet Movie Database
- Plot summary and links
[edit] References
- ^ IMDB Filming locations for Howards End (1992). Retrieved on March 6, 2007.
Preceded by The Commitments |
BAFTA Award for Best Film 1993 |
Succeeded by Schindler's List |