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How Green Was My Valley Poster

How Green Was My Valley

Rich is their humor! Deep are their passions! Reckless are their lives! Mighty is their story!
1941 | 118m | English

(28369 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Details

A man in his fifties reminisces about his childhood growing up in a Welsh mining village at the turn of the 20th century.
Release Date: Oct 28, 1941
Director: John Ford
Writer: Philip Dunne, Richard Llewellyn
Genres: Drama
Keywords based on novel or book, wales, family relationships, rural area, black and white, gossip, mining town, coal mining, coal mine, corporal punishment, coal miner
Production Companies 20th Century Fox
Box Office Revenue: $6,000,000
Budget: $1,250,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Walter Pidgeon Mr. Gruffydd
Maureen O'Hara Angharad Morgan
Anna Lee Bronwyn
Donald Crisp Gwilym Morgan
Roddy McDowall Huw Morgan
John Loder Ianto Morgan
Sara Allgood Beth Morgan
Barry Fitzgerald Cyfartha
Patric Knowles Ivor Morgan
Morton Lowry Mr. Jonas
Arthur Shields Mr. Parry
Ann E. Todd Ceinwen
Frederick Worlock Dr. Richards
Richard Fraser Davy Morgan
Evan S. Evans Gwilym Morgan Jr.
James Monks Owen Morgan
Rhys Williams Dai Bando
Lionel Pape Evans
Ethel Griffies Mrs. Nicholas
Marten Lamont Iestyn Evans
Irving Pichel Adult Huw (Voice)
Jack Curtis Villager (uncredited)
Herbert Evans Postman (uncredited)
Mary Field Eve (uncredited)
Jack Pennick Mine Superintendent (uncredited)
Robert B. Williams Minor Role (uncredited)
Bobby Hale VIllager (uncredited)
Name Job
John Ford Director
Philip Dunne Screenplay
Alfred Newman Original Music Composer
Nathan Juran Art Direction
Hugo Friedhofer Orchestrator
Cliff Lyons Stunts
Richard Day Art Direction
Gwen Wakeling Costume Design
Guy Pearce Makeup Artist
Edward B. Powell Orchestrator
Paul Lockwood Assistant Camera
W. Percy Day Matte Painter
James B. Clark Editor
Thomas Little Set Decoration
Roger Heman Sr. Sound
Tudor Williams Music Arranger
Joseph LaShelle Camera Operator
Fred Sersen Visual Effects
Gene Bryant Assistant Director, Unit Production Manager
Richard Llewellyn Novel
Arthur C. Miller Director of Photography
Eugene Grossman Sound
Ray C. Moore Location Manager
Chesley Bonestell Matte Painter
Wingate Smith Second Assistant Director
Edward O'Fearna Assistant Director
William Koenig Production Manager
Name Title
Darryl F. Zanuck Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Supporting Actress N/A Won
Academy Awards Best Director John Ford Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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2024 5 19 27 12
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

Made at the start of WWII, there is something especially potent about this simple story of a Victorian family of Welsh miners. The mine was their economy, their community and patriarch "Morgan" (Donald Crisp) the stern, but loving, father of five sons. It soon becomes clear to his sons that the reli ... ability of the mining industry as a source of income could be waning. Their wages begin to be cut, the job-for-life that they thought they had started to look much less certain. Much to the chagrin of the older man, they are instrumental in calling a strike and that begins a story that challenges and redefines their social and cultural norms. Simultaneously, a new minister "Gruffydd" (Walter Pidgeon) arrives and his methods cause some consternation too - the villagers are facing tough choices. The final thread here focusses on the youngest "Morgan" - "Huw" (a fine effort from Roddy McDowall) whom his parents are determined will be educated, hopefully ensuring a better chance in life avoiding the pit. John Ford has created a gentle, observational masterpiece here. The characterisations are rich and tender. There is no stand out star, all contribute cohesively to a story of family and loyalty, tragedy and optimism all set against an background of huge change. It isn't a political film, as such. It clearly takes a swipe at the mine employers repeatedly lowering wages, or employing cheaper labour but also glories in their sense of achievement when their choir is commanded to Windsor Castle to sing for Queen Victoria. Though hardly laugh out loud, there is humour here - a very peculiar sense of Welsh, working class drollery that is best exemplified when two villagers decide to teach the bullying school master "Jonas" (Morton Lowry) that vengeance is not just the Lord's. The pace is perfect, the story ebbs and flows most naturally with high standards of production and some fine singing now and again too. Lovely film!

Apr 04, 2022