The Green Years (film) explained

The Green Years
Director:Victor Saville
Producer:Leon Gordon
Screenplay:Robert Ardrey
Sonya Levien
Starring:Charles Coburn
Tom Drake
Beverly Tyler
Hume Cronyn
Gladys Cooper
Dean Stockwell
Selena Royle
Jessica Tandy
Richard Haydn
Andy Clyde
Music:Herbert Stothart
Cinematography:George Folsey
Editing:Robert J. Kern
Studio:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Distributor:Loew's Inc.
Runtime:127 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English
Budget:$2,280,000[1]
Gross:$6,654,000

The Green Years is a 1946 American drama film directed by Victor Saville and featuring Charles Coburn, Tom Drake, Beverly Tyler and Hume Cronyn. It was adapted by Robert Ardrey and Sonya Levien from A. J. Cronin's 1944 novel of the same name. It tells the story of the coming-of-age of an Irish orphan in Scotland.

Plot

In 1900, Robert Shannon, a young orphan, is sent to live with his grandparents in Scotland. His great-grandfather becomes the lad's mentor/father figure, helping him overcome the challenges of youth, and mollifying the cold stinginess of Robert's grandfather. The young Robert suffers life's trials, and the kind, old great-grandfather, despite given to drink and tall tales, is always there to help him rebound. In time, the intelligent Robert grows into a teenager, and comes to love his childhood friend Alison. After many twists and turns, setbacks and near misses, fate inevitably and irrevocably intervenes. He proceeds to attend medical college, attains a career, then marries his sweetheart.

Cast

Uncredited

Reception

The film was very popular at the box office. According to MGM records it made $4,222,000 in the U.S. and Canada and $2,432,000 elsewhere, leading to a profit of $1,941,000.[1] It was one of the more popular films of the year.[2] [3] [4] [5]

Awards and nominations

The Green Years on Turner Classic Movies

The Green Years was shown on Turner Classic Movies on July 13, 2008 as part of a salute to Hume Cronyn. It was also shown on the network April 8, 2021 as part of their annual "31 Days of Oscar" showcase.

Introductory comments

"Hi, I'm Robert Osborne. One of Broadway's and Hollywood's finest, Hume Cronyn, is our man of the night. Next, we have Hume Cronyn in a movie called The Green Years from MGM in 1946. It's one of those movies that you probably never heard of and maybe don't recognize the names from the cast, but the movie itself is really good and certainly worth watching. It's a story about an orphan Irish lad taken in by Scottish relatives where the boy begins a long and loving relationship with his rather crusty but fascinating great-grandfather. The film was based on a novel by the famed writer A. J. Cronin and it's one of the few films made by MGM in the forties which didn't have a Gable or a Tracy, a Rooney, Garson or Hedy Lamarr or some other big star among the players, but the cast we do get really couldn't be better. The leading role is split between two actors — Dean Stockwell, at the age of ten, playing the young lad, Robert, and Tom Drake plays the grown-up Robert — and both are wonderful. Tom Drake you'll recognize from the movie Meet Me in St. Louis. He was the boy next door that Judy Garland falls in love with and sings about.

In our movie there's also Charles Coburn giving a rip-roaring performance which earned him a Supporting Actor Academy Award nomination as Robert's gruff but very loving great-grandad. And you'll see Hume Cronyn, this time appearing with his real-life wife, Jessica Tandy. This was actually the third movie in which the couple had appeared [note: after 1944's ''[[The Seventh Cross (film)|The Seventh Cross]] and Blonde Fever], but they don't play husband and wife in this movie — Cronyn actually plays Jessica's father — and that casting is even more curious when you consider that Jessica Tandy was actually older than Hume Cronyn. She was also very pregnant at the time this movie was made. Well, when the director, Victor Saville, actually found out she was pregnant, he was gonna replace Jessica, but then he couldn't find anybody he thought could do the part as well as she. So she stayed. But do notice that she's often bundled up in very bulky clothes or strategically placed behind furniture to cover her expanding torso. Here, from nineteen forty six, a really wonderful movie, The Green Years."

Robert Osborne's closing comments

"You know, it's kind of hard to grasp the fact that sweet-faced little Dean Stockwell who we just saw as the young Robert, is the same fellow who, years later, played the lip-synching psychopath in David Lynch's Blue Velvet. Dean Stockwell's had a very interesting career — three or four careers, really. There's Dean Stockwell, child star, in films like the one we just showed… and also Anchors Aweigh and The Boy with Green Hair and other movies. Then there's Dean Stockwell that played the thrill killer in Compulsion, as well as the stoned-out hippie in Psych-Out. Then there's a grown-up Dean Stockwell in Blue Velvet and Paris, Texas, Oscar-nominated for Married to the Mob, and a big part of the hit cable series, Battlestar Galactica. Quite a career… and quite an actor. Up next, more with the great Hume Cronyn, as he becomes the object of a young woman's affection, in one of his few starring roles in a movie."

External links

Notes and References

  1. .
  2. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1144&dat=19450701&id=dFMbAAAAIBAJ&sjid=t0wEAAAAIBAJ&pg=3938,4226822&hl=en "Charles Coburn Has Prize Role in 'The Green Years'" (The Pittsburgh Press, July 1, 1945, p. 25)
  3. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=888&dat=19460801&id=aBIwAAAAIBAJ&sjid=204DAAAAIBAJ&pg=7196,4798964&hl=en "Movie Review / 'The Green Years' Proves Tender Story In Movies" (St. Petersburg Times, August 1, 1946, page sixteen)
  4. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=336&dat=19460823&id=VnczAAAAIBAJ&sjid=sXwDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5234,5526298&hl=en "Author Craig Rice Does Story on Newspaper Life / Charles Coburn Plays Grandfather" (The Deseret News, August 23, 1946, p. 14)
  5. https://archive.org/stream/variety165-1947-01#page/n54/mode/1up "60 Top Grossers of 1946", Variety 8 January 1947 p. 8