Splendidly sensual in its existence
There's this movie that is as unsettling, mysterious, and romantic as any other, a masterpiece of so-called unspoken passion. The TV-program posted here was made more than thirty years ago for the then 50th anniversary of the movie I Know Where I'm Going! (1945) directed Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger.
In the movie itself, a young woman travels to a Scottish island to marry a older but rich industrialist, however, bad weather forces her to stay on the nearby bigger island instead and she ends up falling for a local but poor laird. Nancy Franklin, an editor at the New Yorker, was the main source of journalistic input within the documentary I Know Where I’m Going: Revisited.
Franklin travelled to Scotland where many of the important scenes of the movie were filmed. The documentary below presents a whole story of clever cinemac tricks, but nothing about I Know Where I'm Going! seems at all improvised, and in its visual splendor and narrative subtlety, it's among the most aesthetically well-integrated films ever made as well as one of the most engaging
[media=https://youtu.be/XWkiRrM0T3A]
In the movie itself, a young woman travels to a Scottish island to marry a older but rich industrialist, however, bad weather forces her to stay on the nearby bigger island instead and she ends up falling for a local but poor laird. Nancy Franklin, an editor at the New Yorker, was the main source of journalistic input within the documentary I Know Where I’m Going: Revisited.
Franklin travelled to Scotland where many of the important scenes of the movie were filmed. The documentary below presents a whole story of clever cinemac tricks, but nothing about I Know Where I'm Going! seems at all improvised, and in its visual splendor and narrative subtlety, it's among the most aesthetically well-integrated films ever made as well as one of the most engaging
[media=https://youtu.be/XWkiRrM0T3A]