Poor Cow

Poor Cow

DVD cover for Poor Cow
Directed by Ken Loach
Produced by Joseph Janni
Edward Joseph
executive
Nat Cohen
Screenplay by Nell Dunn
Ken Loach
Based on Poor Cow (novel)
by Nell Dunn
Starring Terence Stamp
Carol White
John Bindon
Queenie Watts
Kate Williams
Billy Murray
Music by Donovan
Cinematography Brian Probyn
Edited by Roy Watts
Production
company
Vic Films Productions
Distributed by Anglo-Amalgamated (UK)
National General (US)
Release date
  • 5 December 1967 (1967-12-05) (UK)
Running time
101 min
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Budget £210,000[1]
Box office $1,400,000 (US/ Canada)[2]

Poor Cow is a 1967 British drama film, directed by Ken Loach and based on Nell Dunn's novel of the same name. It was Ken Loach's first feature film, after a series of successful TV productions.

Plot

18-year-old Joy starts her catalogue of bad choices by running away from home with Tom. They marry and have a son, Johnny. When Tom, a thief who mentally and physically abuses Joy, is jailed for four years after attempting a big robbery, she is left on her own with their son.

After briefly sharing a room with her Aunt Emm, an ageing prostitute, she moves in with Dave, one of Tom's former associates. Dave is tender and understanding in his treatment of Johnny and Joy, but the idyll is punctured when Dave gets 12 years for robbery. Intending to be faithful, Joy writes to him constantly, moves back with Aunt Emm, and initiates divorce proceedings against Tom. She takes a job as a barmaid, starts modelling for a seedy photographers' club and drifts into promiscuity.

But when Tom is released, Joy agrees to go back to him for Jonny’s sake. One evening, after Tom has beaten her up, she runs out of their flat and returns to discover that Jonny is missing. After a frantic search, she finds him on a demolition site. Realising how much Johnny means to her, she accepts the need of compromise and stays with Tom, but she continues to dream of a distant future with Dave.

Main cast

Although Malcolm McDowell is listed in the credits, the scenes in which he appeared were deleted.

Production

Terence Stamp says Ken Loach was inspired to write the film after meeting Carol White during Cathy Come Home:

But he really didn’t write it; we didn’t really have a script. That was one of the things that was interesting about it. It was just wholly improvised. He had the idea, he had the overall trajectory in his mind, but we didn’t have a script. And, consequently, it had to be Take One because each of us had cameras on us. So before a take, he’d say something to Carol, and then he would say something to me, and we only discovered once the camera was rolling that he’d given us completely different directions. That’s why he needed two cameras, because he needed the confusion and the spontaneity.[3]

Reception

The film was a surprise success at the box office. It sold to the US for more than its production cost and did extremely well in Italy and Britain.[1]

Music

The opening credits attribute the film music to Donovan, although many pop songs from the era are heard in the film. Three Donovan songs are heard in the film, including the title song. The melody of the title song is repeated instrumentally in diverse arrangements in several parts of the film. It was later released as single b-side to "Jennifer Juniper" in early 1968 in a different arrangement and with altered lyrics. For example, the standard release version opens with the line "I dwell in the north in the green country", while the version in the film opens with the line "I dwell in the town in the grey country".

Other songs by Donovan in the film are "Be Not Too Hard" and "Colours", the latter of which is sung by the character played by Terence Stamp.

Later use

Clips of Stamp's performance in Poor Cow were used to show the early life of Wilson, the character he portrays in Steven Soderbergh's film The Limey (1999).

References

  1. 1 2 Alexander Walker, Hollywood, England, Stein and Day, 1974 p377
  2. "Big Rental Films of 1968", Variety, 8 January 1969 p 15. Please note this figure is a rental accruing to distributors.
  3. Sam Adams, "Terence Stamp on accents, first takes, and playing a transsexual ", AV Club 10 July 2013 accessed 16 July 2013
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