Tom Tulliver
James Mason
Tom Tulliver

Romeo and Juliet in 1930s England. The owner of the mill and the local lord are in conflict over water rights. The lord wins threatening the mill owner with financial ruin.
Tom Tulliver
James Mason
Tom Tulliver
Maggie Tulliver
Geraldine Fitzgerald
Maggie Tulliver
Philip Wakem
Frank Lawton
Philip Wakem
Lucy Deane
Victoria Hopper
Lucy Deane
Mrs. Tulliver
Fay Compton
Mrs. Tulliver
Stephen Guest
Griffith Jones
Stephen Guest
Mrs. Moss
Mary Clare
Mrs. Moss
Mrs. Pullet
Athene Seyler
Mrs. Pullet
Mr. Tulliver
Sam Livesey
Mr. Tulliver
Mrs. Deane
Amy Veness
Mrs. Deane
Mr. Wakem
Felix Aylmer
Mr. Wakem
Mr. Pullet
Eliot Makeham
Mr. Pullet
I have always been more of a fan of George Eliot's stories than of many of her more, shall we say, "sentimental" contemporaries. Her stories were grittier, with far more realistic characters - and this is one of her best. A childhood feud spills over into adulthood and some unique pig-headedness that maximises the misery for the Tulliver and Wakem families. James Mason takes on his first major cinema role here, and he does it well as the opinionated "Tom", elder brother of "Maggie" (Geraldine Fitzgerald) who is admired by "Philip" (Frank Lawton), but he is from the family that put old man "Tulliver" from his mill after losing a law suit - a fact that "Tom" will neither forgive nor forget... There is a smattering of strong supporting characters from Martita Hunt, Fay Compton and Felix Aylmer to give added richness to this rather sad story of bloody-mindedness (and of the dependence young women had on their men-folks in the 1830s). The production is a bit stagey at times, but really redeemed by the last - tragic - ten minutes, and though this adaptation really does simplify the characters a little too much, it still clings on to enough of the story to make it worth a watch.
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