Woman of Dolwyn (1949) Poster

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7/10
The Drowning of Dolwyn
richardchatten18 January 2023
Britain's precursor to 'Wild River' is the only film ever directed by Emlyn Williams, in which he rather perversely cast himself as the serpent in this particular Eden in the form of a disgraced local boy who doesn't even understand Welsh chased out of town for stealing the collection money returned to the land of his fathers to gloatingly offer an ultimatum to the locals to let their village die or face financial oblivion.

Returning locals speak with wonder of Liverpool as an exotic place of houses with seven windows, full of people who never speak to each other; while Edith Evans plays the Jo Van Fleet role and a young and dashing Richard Burton plays Evans' adopted son, both of whom we actually get to hear speak gaelic.
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7/10
There wont be a welcome in the valley
malcolmgsw18 October 2022
There is a marked contrast between the careers of the two leads,Richard Burton,in his debut performance,and Emlyn Wiliiams.

Burton shows here why he went on to become a star,but after marrying Elizabeth taylor his career was doomed,apart for a couple of performances. Otherwise it was a case of take the money and run till his early death.

Williams on the other hand had been around since the thirties and would be around for a time after Burton's death.

As a writer he knew how to write best for himself. Thus he played maany villains,particularly blackmailers and he was very effective as such.

They both make this a very watchable film.
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6/10
Welsh D(ep)resser
writers_reign2 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Today, of course, the main selling point is Richard Burton in his first film role and in the event it is a disappointment because the magnificent voice has yet to achieve that unique timbre and in terms of acting Emlyn William's screenplay doesn't give him much scope. On the other hand we can rejoice in the superlative performance from Edith Evans who walks away with everything except the director's viewfinder. Taking a leaf out of Noel Coward's book Williams wrote himself a meaty part and played it to the full, as the once-scorned local boy who left the village, made good, and is now back, unrecognized, having brokered a deal to have the village flooded to provide water for Lancashire. It's a time-capsule of a movie providing a glimpse of a lost world in more ways than one and most of the cast are up to snuff but the ridiculously contrived ending lets it down at the very end.
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9/10
Thoughtful and Moving Film.
ronevickers4 April 2008
The Last Days of Dolwyn is a thoughtful and moving film, which conveys its main purpose expertly. The storyline is a simple one, and concerns the flooding of a small welsh village to provide water to the inhabitants of certain towns in Lancashire, England. Emlyn Williams completes a tour-de-force as writer, director and star of this film. On all three counts he does exceptionally well, and it was no surprise that he went on to become a famous showbiz personality. His portrayal of the arrogant and selfish agent is particularly noteworthy, and he is the perfect villain of the piece. In fact, the whole cast is top notch, and there isn't a dud performance to be seen. This top quality ensemble playing does greatly enhance the film, as does the typical welsh valley scenery. However, a special mention must be made of that great actress Edith Evans, who gives a magnificent performance in the lead role. She demonstrates the art of acting at its very best, and undoubtedly brings that extra special touch of quality to this film. It's not an easy film to track down, but is well worth the effort if you can see it. Highly recommended.
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10/10
'We're all being deported to England!'
robert-temple-13 June 2010
This Welsh tale is one of the great British postwar films, made with love and passion by a variety of leading figures of Welsh background or descent. It was written by Emlyn Williams, who also played a lead role in it, and it was the only film he ever directed in his long career as actor, playwright, and screenwriter. Until the age of 12, Williams lived in a small Welsh village where only Welsh was spoken. By a quirk of fate, his innate talent and ability were discovered and he got a scholarship to Oxford, thereby escaping a life of drudgery and being catapulted into the world of the arts. He was one of the most famous Welshmen of his day, and died as late as 1987. Having not appeared in a film since 1916, the great British stage actress Edith Evans (later Dame Edith), decided in 1949 to work in the cinema again. She had dominated the London stage for several decades, and was 61 years old. Evans is a Welsh name, and presumably, though born in London, Edith Evans was attracted to this Welsh story because of her own heritage, and also because hers is the lead role in the story. The result was probably her greatest film performance, in which she spoke rather a lot of Welsh very convincingly. She plays a widow who is a humble cottager in the village of Dolwyn. Her only child died twenty years before, and she adopted two boys, played by Richard Burton and Anthony James. This was Burton's first film role, and he speaks a great deal of Welsh in the part. As most people know, Burton was of humble and significantly ethnic Welsh origins just like Emlyn Williams, who became his close friend and mentor. The minister in this film is played by another Welshman, Hugh Griffiths, a beloved character actor for many decades in Britain. The film was produced for British Lion by Anatole de Grunwald, who wisely let the talented team get on with it undisturbed, and do their Welsh thing without interference. I knew the continuity girl, June Faithful, many years later, when she was still working as a continuity girl. She was very highly thought of and she struck me as being extremely devoted to her work. I go out of my way to mention her credited job on this film because it is not listed in her credits for IMDb for some reason. I hate for people to go unacknowledged. I have no idea whether she was related to the much younger actress and singer Marianne Faithful (born 1946), but assume not, as I have never heard it mentioned. This film has a very powerful dramatic twist to it late in the story. For much of the film, however, the idyllic life of a small Welsh village of 1892 is portrayed in great detail. As one would expect with the Welsh, who never stop singing, there is a great deal of that. There is a boy who minds the sheep whose fine tenor voice is heard throughout the story, and he sings while the town is flooded because he cannot bear to leave. We see the waters rising up his legs, but his tenor voice rings out, singing in his native Welsh as if his heart would burst. Let no one underestimate the importance of singing to the Welsh. The Methodist chapel culture is well portrayed, with fiery sermons in Welsh and everyone in the village attending, then the men withdraw to the pub to discuss the sermon afterwards. Women are not allowed in the pub because 'it would be a scandal for a woman to be seen in the pub'. At crucial moments in the story, all the villagers join in singing hymns spontaneously. If anyone thinks that is sentimental nonsense, think again. The traditional Welsh were like that, and much of it still survives. My wife and I have driven into an obscure Welsh village and stopped because we heard the distant sound of a heavenly choir, followed the sound, and found a church full of Welshmen singing their hearts out in rehearsal for a forthcoming local concert. They do that, they really do, and they need little encouragement to burst into song in Wales, where they lack the English diffidence. The story of this film is about a rich man who returns from London, where he has made his fortune, to Dolwyn from which he had been expelled at the age of 12 for stealing money from the church, driven out of town in fact by people throwing stones at him. He has seethed with offended pride and violent hatred of the villagers ever since. He has now returned to wreak his vengeance upon them, like Ingrid Bergman in THE VISIT. In concert with an English peer, he has bought up most of the village so that he can flood it with water from a nearby dam and eradicate from the earth the scene of his youthful humiliation. But Edith Evans, who plays a simple village woman of no pretensions, and who has never travelled more than a few miles from her village in her lifetime, stands in his way. The scenery may be pastoral and quaint in the extreme, but the conflict is one of life and death. This is a film resonant with meaning and relevance for our own time, more than for 1949 when it was made. After all, one cannot but think of all those poor people uprooted because of the Three Gorges Dam in China.
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9/10
hidden gem
drystyx8 June 2011
This is a film that is hard to find, but when yo find it, it's worth it. It moves briskly for a drama, and has lots of charm.

It is the story of big business against the little people, in this case the little people being a Welsh village.

But the big business isn't portrayed so one dimensionally, either. In fact, only one heartless man is responsible for the turmoil caused, and indeed the British lord in charge is much more sensible and human. However, the heartless man is in the role of agent, and once lived in the village before being discovered as a thief.

Two elements that magnetize a viewer to this piece are Irony and Atmosphere. This film is high on both, and I love Irony and Atmosphere.
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10/10
Yes, It's a Gem...
Enrique-Sanchez-5624 April 2002
Richard Burton's first film and Dame Edith Evans before her smash hit in Wilde's "Earnest"(and after establishing herself in the theatre and knighted), plus a wonderful cast of supporting characters and an atmosphere of solid strength of morals and ethics which only British films can evoke so memorably on celluloid.

This movie is a gem because it seeps into the deepest crevices of our hearts by a subtle interplay of mood and character study where words fail and acting skill take over.

'The Last Days of Dolwyn' is highly recommended. If you have the chance see it.
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9/10
this movie is a hidden gem
d94rc22 September 2001
Warning: Spoilers
Warning: partial plot spoiler follows.

I recently came across this movie, quite by accident. It was showing on the Carton Cinema channel when I came home from work and as a flicked through the channels, I was hooked.

The basic plot is a Welsh valley is to be flooded to provide a reservoir for mill towns in Lancashire while the entire population are moved to a square mile of terraced houses in Liverpool.

The older members of the village are often bemused at the thought of city folk offering them a 'better life' when they are perfectly happy in Dolwyn. Some of the younger folk are excited by this.

The idea is 'sold' to the town by a young Richard Burton, forcefully playing the man who was once a teenage delinquent forced to leave the town (though, of course, thanks to the passage of time, nobody recognises him).

The scenario of valleys, etc, being flooded was not uncommon in the early 20th century and this film captures your imagination. You can sense the anticipation of those who see Liverpool as a better life and you feel sad with those who have been told their beautiful village is to be flooded.

The plot largely revolves around one old lady's attempt to foil the flooding and carries an interesting twist in the tail at the end.

This movie is well worth watching. You are in for a treat when you do.

I give it 10/10
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10/10
A wonderful story, based on fact.
mannbarbara3 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I would love to agree with d94rc who headed his/her review "This movie is a hidden gem". But I cannot agree with someone who doesn't know the difference between Emlyn Williams and Richard Burton! Williams wrote, directed and played the villian in this brilliant film. Burton was the young hero and the whole cast was excellent, with the honours going to Edith Evans who, as Merri, might have saved the village, but chose to save her adoped son instead.
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9/10
Thoughtful
Picgoer20 July 2022
An unexpectedly strong performance from most of the cast in this delightful, thoughtful film.

Edith Evans gave a low key, believable performance, far removed from the over the top, grandstanding appearances she became known for later on.

It was interesting to see and hear the very young Richard Burton, speaking and singing in his native tongue. It is easy to see how he rapidly rose in the firmament of acting stars but also sad to know that his wonderful voice would be ruined by his lifestyle.

Emlyn Williams brilliantly portrayed a small rural village and it inhabitants, which could have been found all over the U. K. where most of the inhabitants often had little control over their lives, (as it was and is elsewhere in the world). In the era the film was set, 'Progress' was king and the little people were ignored. A number of villages were flooded in order to create reservoirs for major and expanding towns. Many reservoirs have been constructed all over the U. K. in more recent times, some flooding villages and towns. The experience of the villagers in the film is mirrored still, in other countries e.g.Egypt and the Aswan Dam and more recently China and the Three Gorges Dam.

The majority of speaking parts were clearly played by actors who were fluent in Welsh, which was spoken extensively.

The film is understated, not flashy and reliant on big budget 'Disaster Movie' effects. It is about the people.
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Taps into a broader authenticity
philosopherjack22 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
In The Last Days of Dolwyn, the only film directed by Welsh playwright Emlyn Williams, he casts himself as Rob, returning to a picturesque village of his youth with the object of buying up all the property rights and flooding the place, thus facilitating the most cost-effective flow of water from the nearby dam across the border to England. The locals are offered a new life in Liverpool, only a hundred miles away, but far beyond the experience of most; it's telling that they seem to lack the inner or financial resources to consider any alternatives, like moving to another, closer village. The ultimate plot mechanics, depending on a cruel twist of fate, are rather unproductively melodramatic (not helped by Williams' own egregious over-acting), but the film does tap into a broader authenticity, aided by large amounts of untranslated Welsh-language dialogue (the village's dominant tongue, with some of its inhabitants barely functional in English). The film is notable for Richard Burton in his first screen role, also often speaking Welsh (although much of his time on screen is squandered on a pointless romance) and an early appearance by future Oscar-winner Hugh Griffith, who would seldom be as restrained in his later roles. And the estimable Edith Evans, playing the mother of Burton's character, is quite touching at times, never more than in a scene where she visits the local gentry to plead her case, and is simply unable to process that a grand-looking house could be burdened by debt, such that its inhabitants would possibly describe themselves as functionally poor. For all its flaws and limitations, the film conveys the tragedy of forced migration, the loss of sense of place and belonging and community; it's a theme that takes on renewed charge in the era of climate disruption (as the bill comes due, you might say, for so much reckless intervention into peacefully sustainable lives.)
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Engaging though forgettable melodrama
barnabyrudge29 January 2003
The Last Days of Dolwyn is an interesting minor drama set in the valleys of Wales. It is set in the 1890s, and details the events that lead up to the deliberate flooding of a village in order to create a new reservoir. Some of the villagers are excited about the prospects being relocated once their village has gone, while others wish that they could carry on living where they do.

The acting throughout this film is superlative, including a young looking Richard Burton making his film debut. However, the dramatic aspects of the story are rather low key, almost to the point where they don't work. The climax should be really exciting, since it deals with a handful of people who find themselves trapped in the village in the minutes before it is due to be flooded, yet the sequence fizzles out without making much of an impact.

The Last Days of Dolwyn is worth watching for the acting, and the lovely Welsh settings. But if you're wanting a strong emotional story thread, this film simply doesn't provide it.
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