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Rocking Horse Winner, The
The Rocking Horse Winner was produced by John Mills, who acts a key role but doesn't dominate this disturbing show. It's as controlled and civilized as a movie can get, but the cast manage to enliven the barely-sketched characters of the very short story. Mills is responsible and concerned, a member of the servant class who takes his role seriously. Valerie Hobson, still beautiful but in a completely different temper from The Bride of Frankenstein, has the best part, as the society wife who resents all attempts to make her live in any kind of fiscal reality. Her husband is more of a non-entity, who blames her for all the extravagance, but doesn't seem to be capable of taking charge on his own.
Ronald Squire, the uncle who repeatedly bails his sister out, only to be criticized for it, is usually seen in stuffy businessman roles, but here has a nice character arc, from reserved hostility to awe at the amazing gambling talent of young John Howard Davies. For his part, the child actor looks too old to be eleven but plays the role well. He's the kind of overly-earnest sheltered kid who takes things far too literally and innocently causes havoc in things like Carol Reed's The Fallen Idol.
There's a fantastic element to The Rocking Horse Winner that's necessary to keep the show rolling but, at least in the film version, obscures what has to be the author's social comment. Desperate to rescue the family, young Paul engages in furious bouts of horse-riding that he's convinced tell him the names of track winners; meanwhile, the house itself haunts him with the call, "There must be more money". 1 The standard interpretation of both the story and the film is that Lawrence is decrying the inverted ethics of the Bourgeoisie that place a certain level of conspicuous consumption as a birthright, and then do whatever is necessary to maintain that level.
Mrs. Grahame blames her husband, and then finds elaborate semantic dodges to blame her own brother, whose generosity is the only thing keeping them afloat. Mr. Grahame protests, but there's always another party to go to and appearances to keep up; barely involved in his own family, father just doesn't care. The key scene occurs when Mrs. Grahame goes to a squalid street to bicker with a horrid pawn shop dealer (a rather shaky un-PC characterization) to rescue herself from humiliation at the hands of a bailiff. It's every nightmare she can imagine rolled into one - having to talk as equals to lowly civil servants and usurers - having dirty street kids put their hands on her. In a different kind of movie, Mrs. Grahame would soon be planning to murder her kindly brother, to get her hands on that Money There Must Be More Of.
But young Paul does care, with the intensity only a naive child can summon. He works to the logical conclusion that if luck alone can save the family, it's his duty to be lucky. He earns every cent won by his 'magic' horse-riding, in sweat and anxiety. Young Paul has the weight of an entire social class on his shoulders, even though he's unaware of a class structure - servant Bassett just 'is'. As his mother doesn't know where the sudden influx of cash comes from (and doesn't care), Paul has to keep winning at ever-higher stakes. Eventually the strain is too much.
Although a small part of the whole, the riding sequences in The Rocking Horse Winner are what's often quoted as highly creative to film students, using cutting, point of view and distorted sets to create a madly rocking montage. With its fevered music, the film resembles a missing segment from Dead of Night; and plays like an extended Twilight Zone episode, without a host to tell us what the moral is. Like most of the talent from Dead of Night, able director Anthony Pelissier has remained relatively obscure. Or did producer Mills dictate much of the film?
Modern viewers who expect movies like this to lead to multiple murder or ghosts coming out of the walls are going to be disappointed, but The Rocking Horse Winner remains a modest classic from the 'quiet but distinguished' school of English filmmaking.
Home Vision Entertainment's DVD of The Rocking Horse Winner is a clear and sparkling transfer of a film that used to be seen here in mushy 16mm prints. It hasn't been around in a while, so there'll be a sizeable curiosity for it, that the disc won't disappoint. The picture is unrestored but intact with very little marking or damage. The sound is the tiniest bit crunchy-sounding, which prompted Savant to reach for the closed captions or subtitles, but there weren't any.
The extras make the disc a surefire educational tool. First, the insert booklet contains the entire short story. There's also a radio version of the story read by John Shea. Audio excerpts from a chamber opera, and a 20 minute Pixelvision short film by Michael Almereyda are included as well. The short subject is a nice introduction to the Pixelvision mini-format, a kiddie toy video camera with very limited resolution.
The elaborate trimmings on this disc probably account for its top-end price. HVe is clearly taking great pains to present its titles in an intelligent framework of extras; this release is the equal of its cousin company Criterion.
On a scale of Excellent, Good, Fair, and Poor, The Rocking Horse Winner rates:
Movie: Excellent
Video: Very Good
Sound: Good
Supplements: short film, opera excerpts, radio broadcast, text of short story
Packaging: Amaray case
Reviewed: September 21, 2002
Footnotes:
1. Hollywood has it's own version of "There must be more money" - it must be whispered around the halls of studios, every time the decision is made to propogate yet another series sequel to some lame franchise. Michael Myers has just pulled in another 200 million ... soon the wheels will start to turn to make Austin Powers vs. HornyDude or whatever.
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