Wednesday 19 November 2008

Juno and the Paycock

Movie Review: Juno and the Paycock

Year of Release: 1930
Country of Origin: UK
Director: Alfred Hitchcock
Cast: Barry Fitzgerald, Maire O'Neill, Edward Chapman, Sidney Morgan, Sara A
llgood

Plot outline: During the Irish revolution, a family earns a big inheritance. They start leading a rich life forgetting what the most important values are (IMDb).

An assortment of Hitchcock's greatest
early movies are featured in a three-disc collection. Hitchcock's second talkie was a surprisingly static adaptation of Sean O'Casey stage drama Juno and the Paycock. Set during the Irish "troubles" of the early 1920s, the movie focuses on the trials and tribulations of a typical Dublin tenement family. Sara Allgood is brilliant as family matriarch Juno Boyle, who must contend with her bibulous, braggadocio husband, Captain Jack Boyle (Edward Chapman), known as the "paycock" because he always struts around like he owns the world. As Captain Jack carouses with his drinking buddy Joxer Daly (Sydney Morgan), Juno tries to keep her family together, a task that proves harder with each passing day, especially when daughter Mary (Kathleen O'Regan) is impregnated by her irresponsible boyfriend. Things take a tragic turn when Juno's weakling son Johnny (John Laurie), a member of the IRA, is shot as an informer by his own comrades. Sara Allgood's scenes after the death of her son are absolutely heart-wrenching, offering ample compensation for Hitchcock's plodding direction and the hopelessly hammy performance by Edward Chapman. (NYT)

My judgement: ** out of 4 stars

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