Hugh Davin
Stewart Granger
Hugh Davin

Based on real events, this historical drama is set in 19th-century Ireland, when poverty-stricken tenants dispossessed by greedy landowner Capt. Boycott (Cecil Parker) band together to assert their rights. Patriotic farmer Hugh Davin (Stewart Granger) leads the rebels. Choosing nonviolent resistance, the villagers ostracize their nemesis, who squanders his fortune to repair his ruined reputation and wagers what's left on a horse race.
Hugh Davin
Stewart Granger
Hugh Davin
Anne Killain
Kathleen Ryan
Anne Killain
Capt. Charles C. Boycott
Cecil Parker
Capt. Charles C. Boycott
Watty Connell
Mervyn Johns
Watty Connell
Father McKeogh
Alastair Sim
Father McKeogh
Daniel McGinty
Noel Purcell
Daniel McGinty
Mark Killain
Niall MacGinnis
Mark Killain
Mrs. Davin
Maureen Delaney
Mrs. Davin
Sean Kerin
Eddie Byrne
Sean Kerin
Michael Fagan
Liam Gaffney
Michael Fagan
Martin Egan
Liam Redmond
Martin Egan
Sgt. Dempsey
Edward Lexy
Sgt. Dempsey
This is quite interesting if only for an etymology lesson in the origins of the word "boycott". Cecil Parker is the eponymous gentleman who stokes the hatred of his Irish Tenant farmers in the late 1800s. Charles Parnell (Robert Donat) preaches a more pacifist approach to protest - and so Stewart Granger ("Hugh") encourages his colleagues to down-tools and stop collecting the crops, stop paying the exorbitant rents - and to shun anyone who is prepared to co-operate with this horrendously arbitrary system. Using his agent "Connell" (Mervyn Jones), the Captain has his farmers evicted and this soon leads to conflict between Granger and his love "Anne" (Kathleen Ryan) who has taken over one of the tenancies from an evicted family and earned the scorn of her neighbours... This story is essentially just a vehicle for Granger - his dashing good looks and on-screen charisma shine, as do Parker as the pompous Captain; Mervyn Johns as his really quite weaselly acolyte and Alastair Sim is engaging as the not-so-neutral priest "McKeogh"; but the dialogue is pretty wooden (the star's accent seems a bit confused) and the story of grit and determination lacks any substantial portrayal of either, really. Certainly, it passes 90 minutes easily enough, but maybe just a bit too light and fluffy for the subject matter...
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