On The 50th
Anniversary- Julie Christie and Alan Bates’ Film Adaptation of Thomas Hardy’s “Far
From The Madding Crowd” (1967)
DVD Review
By Senior Film Critic
Sandy Salmon
Far From The Madding
Crowd, starring Julie Christie, Alan Bates, Peter Finch, Terence Stamp, based
on the novel of the same name by Thomas Hardy, 1967
I am sure sometimes
readers of these reviews must wonder why a certain film is being reviewed,
especially older films which while a big deal in the old days may not seem
classical enough to warrant coverage forty, fifty, sixty years later. There are
many reasons for choices but for the film adaptation of Thomas Hardy’s Far From The Madding Crowd there is one,
and only one, reason. I had a big time “crush” on actress Julie Christie. That
crush started not on this film but for her part in David Lean’s Doctor Zhivago about the turbulent period
around the Russian Revolution and the early part of Stalin’s reign based on a
book, a forbidden book under Stalin if I recall, by Russian writer Boris
Paternak. If memory serves I almost lost a girlfriend, the girlfriend that I
saw the film under review with, over my unbridled gushing on and on about Ms.
Christie’s blue eyes (that gal’s eye were brown and she had come from an all
brown-eyed world in Manhattan), figure (hers was very good as well but no young
woman then, maybe now as well although body shaming is rightly considered
social error, if not political liked to have some other woman’s body commented
upon) and long blonde hair (hers again brown from that brown-eyed Manhattan
Lower East Jewish quarters world). Not a good move no question but what could
you expect of wet-behind-the ears high school student from New Jersey who was a
“late bloomer” in the dating/sexual allure world.
So much for young
romantic love misadventures, although I rekindled that crush in re-watching this
film so many not so young romantic misadventures since I went on and on to my
longtime companion about those blue eyes (hers are brown) although she has that
same ethereal beauty Ms. Christie had (and maybe still has since I have not
seen her in anything recently). So maybe I am an eternal wet-behind-the ears
guy. My big idea in taking this date to see this film is another little quirk I
had. We had just finished reading Thomas Hardy’s Mayor of Casterbridge (Casterbridge the scene of many of Hardy’s
novels) which I had been enthralled with, had devoured well before the class
was supposed to finish the novel and I was trying to see if it was worthwhile
for me to read the book this film was based on. I did that a lot then although
now it is more likely to be the reverse, to read the book and then see the film
adaptation which sometimes, actually many times, is not true to the author’s
intention or plotline. That is a story for another day though.
As Sam Lowell, the
previous senior film critic now emeritus, is always found of saying let’s get
the “skinny” on this one. Let’s get to why I was enthralled by Thomas Hardy’s
novels and this film adaptation beyond short-cuts and Ms. Christie’s blue eyes.
I grew up in the city, in urban Trenton (actually just outside but close enough
to consider myself a city boy as did my friends) so reading about the rural
life in 19th century England was almost like I was reading a space
adventure. The film in some scenes like when the shepherd Gabriel, Allan Bates’
role, loses all his flock when his sheep dog goes berserk and drives them over a
cliff into the sea, or when Bathsheba’s, Ms. Christie’s role as the inherited
from her uncle landowner, sheep come down with a disease that lays them low and
harvesting wheat graphically showed what I had imagined when I read my first
Thomas Hardy novel.
But what we have here in
this film is really well beyond some idyllic agricultural ideal a city boy had
about the country. Let’s face it and deal with the real subject-the romantic
endeavors of Bathsheba’s three, count them, three suitors and her attitude
toward each one (and the reason that long ago almost lost girlfriend and the
miffed longtime companion both loved the film). As noted poor girl Bathsheba
inherited a landed estate from her deceased uncle. Being young and energetic
she was determined to run the place herself and show what she was made of
against the views of her fellow male landowners, male tenants and employees who
believed she was in over her head. And at times, like that sheep sickness time,
she relied despite her own judgement, she had to depend on Gabriel who after
being spurned on his marriage proposal by Bathsheba before she inherited that
land and losing his flock to that berserk dog found himself in her employ.
Spurned love number one down.
While tending to her
land the precocious Bathsheba gathered in another suitor, the older bachelor
neighboring landowner, Mr. Boldwood, played by Peter Finch, who developed a
late life obsession about her. Spurned love number two. Along comes number
three, a young man, Frank, played by bad boy Terence Stamp, a rather dashing
cavalry sergeant and she is smitten beyond reason. (As was that almost lost
girlfriend and that current longtime companion to Stamp’s blue eyes but I will
just charge that to their respective reactions to my going on and on about Ms.
Christie.) They eventually marry and this proves a marriage not made in heaven
as he is something of a wastrel and philander. Or so it seemed until Fanny, a
young woman from Bathsheba’s estate, whom he had gotten with child as they used
to say delicately in the old days and was to marry came back to claim her man.
Too late since she was very ill and passed away along with that child she bore.
That began Frank’s gnashing of teeth over her death and he subsequent alleged
drowning at sea.
End of story for the
widowed Bathsheba (although since the body was not found she would have to wait
the legal seven years in order to remarry). Or so I would think. Re-enter that
besotted Boldwood and another marriage proposal. Spurned again. End of story
now. Well no that bastard Frank actually had not died but had taken off for parts
unknown and wouldn’t you know showed up just when Bathsheba was ready to
conditionally accept Boldwood’s marriage proposal. End of Frank as the enraged
Boldwood pulled the old rooty-toot-toot and he fell down. Off to the gallows
and probably some measure of relief for the unlucky Boldwood. You can’t have a romance
end on a sour note, or at least you couldn’t in a 19th century
romantic novel so with two departed lovers finished dear fickle, there is no other
word for it, Bathsheba finally, finally gets under the sheets with Gabriel something
that kept getting telegraphed throughout the movie as they threw those
meaningful glances as each other. And maybe Ms. Christie batted those blues eyes.
A fine if long film version of well-done book.