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{{short description|1956 film by George Cukor}} | ||
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2024}} | |||
{{Infobox Film | |||
{{EngvarB|date=February 2024}} | |||
| name = Bhowani Junction | |||
{{Infobox film | |||
| name = Bhowani Junction | |||
| image = Bhowani Junction.jpg | | image = Bhowani Junction.jpg | ||
| caption = |
| caption = Theatrical film poster | ||
| director = ] | | director = ] | ||
| producer = ] | | producer = ] | ||
| writer = ] |
| writer = ]<br />] | ||
| based_on = {{Based on|'']''<br />1954 novel|]}} | |||
| starring = ]<br> ]<br> ] <br> ]<br> ]<br> ] | |||
| starring = ]<br />]<br />]<br />]<br />]<br />] | |||
| music = ] | | music = ] | ||
| cinematography = ] | | cinematography = ] | ||
| editing = |
| editing = George Boemler<br />] | ||
| studio = Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios | |||
| distributor = ] | |||
| distributor = ] | |||
| released = {{flagicon|USA}} | |||
| released = {{film date|df=y|1956|10|29|UK}}{{Film date|df=yes|1956|5|1|USA}} | |||
| runtime = 110 min | |||
| |
| runtime = 110 minutes | ||
| |
| country = United Kingdom | ||
| language = |
| language = English | ||
| budget = $3,637,000<ref name="Mannix">'The Eddie Mannix Ledger’, Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study, Los Angeles</ref> | |||
| budget = | |||
| gross = $4,875,000<ref name="Mannix"/> | |||
| preceded_by = | |||
| followed_by = | |||
| amg_id = | |||
| imdb_id = 0049007 | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''''Bhowani Junction''''' is a ] ] of the 1952 novel '']'' by ] made by ]. | |||
The film was directed by ] and produced by ] from a screenplay by ] and ]. | |||
'''''Bhowani Junction''''' is a 1956 British ] ] film of the 1954 novel '']'' by ]. The film was directed by ] and produced by ] from a screenplay by ] and ]. | |||
The film stars ] as Victoria Jones, an ] ] in the ], and ] as Colonel Rodney Savage, a British army officer, with ], ], ] and ]. | |||
The film stars ] as Victoria Jones, an ] who has been serving in the ], and ] as Colonel Rodney Savage, a ] officer. It also features ], ], ], and ]. | |||
The film was shot at ], ], ], England and on location in ], ]. | |||
The film was shot in England at ], ], ], on the ],<ref>{{cite book|author=Ronald, D. W.|author2=Carter, R. J.|title=The Longmoor Military Railway|publisher=David & Charles|location=Newton Abbot|year=1974|isbn=0-7153-6357-3|page=168}}</ref> and on location in ], Pakistan. | |||
==Plot== | |||
India, 1947: In the final days of British rule, Victoria Jones, the beautiful daughter of an Indian mother and an English ], is serving in the British Army. She returns on leave after four years to her childhood home in the fictional town of Bhowani, north-western India, where supporters of ] are campaigning for ] while communists, led by a revolutionary known as Davay, foment riot and sabotage. | |||
She becomes reacquainted with a childhood sweetheart also of ] heritage, rail traffic superintendent Patrick Taylor, and also with Colonel Rodney Savage, a British army officer whose Indian battalion has been posted to Bhowani to maintain law and order as British rule ends. The protesters disrupt the rail service and Savage places Victoria on duty during the crisis. He disperses the protesters violently and Victoria does not approve of his methods. She begins seriously contemplating her identity and speculates that she should marry a man from India, although clearly Taylor is still in love with her and Savage has become infatuated with her. | |||
Walking home alone one night, Victoria is attacked and nearly raped by Captain McDaniel, one of Savage's men, but in self-defence she strikes him on the head with a steel bar and kills him. Finding her, a ] co-worker of Taylor's, Ranjit Kasel, takes her to his home and offers her sanctuary, introducing her to his mother, the Sadani, and to a guest in their home, Ghanshyam, who offers to hide McDaniel's body after the Sadani worries that her son Ranjit will be accused of murdering the officer. | |||
Davay's raids on the military infrastructure continue. He blows up a train, causing numerous deaths and injuries. Victoria, influenced by her love for India, decides to marry Ranjit, but during the ceremony, fearing the complete loss of her dual race identity, suddenly flees. When an army sentry is found murdered because he saw McDaniel and Victoria together just before she killed the officer, Victoria realizes that the man in Ranjit's home, Ghanshyam, is actually Davay and that the Sadani, once a notorious Indian resistance leader, has been harboring him. | |||
Davay kidnaps Victoria, using her to escape the city aboard her father's train. Savage and Taylor intercept the train before it reaches a tunnel, rescuing Victoria but finding Davay has gone into the tunnel with dynamite. Taylor recklessly advances into the tunnel to defuse the dynamite but is shot by Davay, who in turn is immediately shot and killed by Savage. Savage, cradling Taylor as he dies, watches the safe passage of the train. On board is ], whom Davay intended to assassinate, thereby inciting further hostilities and riots. | |||
Savage's duty in India ends and he is summoned back to England, but his love for Victoria has become overwhelming. When she refuses to marry him and live in England, he proposes to marry but remain in India, and she accepts. Savage's superior offers to expedite his early release from military service in acknowledgement for his accomplishments. | |||
==Cast== | |||
* ] as Victoria Jones | |||
* ] as Colonel Rodney Savage | |||
* ] as Patrick Taylor | |||
* ] as Surabhai | |||
* ] as Ranjit Kasel | |||
* ] as Govindaswami | |||
* ] as Ghanshyam aka Davay | |||
* ] as Thomas Jones | |||
* ] as the Sadani | |||
* ] as Captain Graham McDaniel | |||
* ] as Ted Dunphy | |||
* Yousaf D Hamdani as Assistant Director | |||
* ] as a 15-year-old girl | |||
* Zohra Mahmood, special appearance | |||
==Differences from novel== | |||
The film, like the original novel, portrays the Anglo-Indian protagonist, Victoria Jones, as tugged in different directions by three suitors, Col. Rodney Savage, Ranjit Kasel and Patrick Taylor, each representing a different ethnic community: British, Indian (Sikh) and Anglo-Indian, respectively. The film-makers, however, changed the novel's ending and Victoria's fate. Whereas in the novel Victoria finally seeks her future with her fellow Anglo-Indian Patrick, a railway worker, the film-makers instead matched her at the end with the more obviously dashing British officer Rodney Savage, while consigning Patrick to a heroic death.<ref name=Jacobson>{{cite web|last=Jacobson|first=Andrew|title=Bhowani Junction –a brief but memorable encounter with Hollywood|url=http://area148.com/cms/bhowani-junction-a-brief-but-memorable-encounter-with-hollywood/|access-date=7 May 2013|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141006151540/http://area148.com/cms/bhowani-junction-a-brief-but-memorable-encounter-with-hollywood/|archive-date=6 October 2014}}</ref> | |||
(In the writer's own depiction, in the (unfilmed) sequel "]", Rodney Savage does stay on in India after the end of British rule – but he does not marry Victoria, but rather goes through many upheavals and eventually finds love with an Indian woman.) | |||
A related issue is that in the book, Victoria Jones is described as having a distinctly brown skin, being of partly Indian ancestry. When she wears a ], she looks very much like an Indian girl, and much of the theme of the book concerns her attraction to the idea of being exactly that. For the same reason, she is well aware that if she were to marry Savage and go with him to England, she could expect to meet ]s from his upper class milieu. All of these factors, which have a significant influence on the personality of Victoria as depicted in the book, were profoundly changed in the film by the choice of casting the ] actress Ava Gardner for the role.{{citation needed|date=February 2021}} | |||
==Production== | |||
The novel was the fourth by ] about India.<ref>{{cite news|title=Talk with john masters|author=L. N.|date=28 Mar 1954|work=New York Times|id={{ProQuest|113010573}}}}</ref> MGM outbid two other studios to buy the film rights, paying more than $100,000.<ref>{{Cite news|title=METRO BIDS HIGH FOR INDIA NOVEL|author=THOMAS M PRYOR|date=12 Apr 1954|work=New York Times|id={{ProQuest|113115288}}}}</ref> Ava Gardner and Stewart Granger were announced as leads almost immediately; Gardner had been on suspension at the studio for refusing to appear in '']''.<ref>{{cite news|date=14 Aug 1954|title=AVA GARDNER SET FOR FILM ON INDIA|work=New York Times|id={{ProQuest|112983416}}}}</ref> | |||
] was assigned to direct. He travelled to India in October 1954 to research the movie. "I feel that for the first time India has been presented in this book as it really is, instead of the usual hokey-pokey atmosphere in which it is painted by most authors who write about it", he said.<ref>{{cite news|title=George Cukor Here To Get the feel of india|date=3 Oct 1954|work=The Times of India|id={{ProQuest|608296868}}}}</ref> | |||
The Indian government refused to cooperate with the production of the film.<ref>{{Cite news|title=BY WAY OF REPORT|author=A.H. WEILER|date=24 Oct 1954|work=New York Times|id={{ProQuest|113049044}}}}</ref> | |||
The fictional location Bhowani ] was in India, most probably ]. MGM had wanted to shoot the film in location in India; but, as the government of India insisted on script approval and imposed high taxes, MGM decided to film in Pakistan where the government was more welcoming.<ref name="Jacobson"/><ref>{{Cite news|title=First 'invasion' of pakistan by film troupe met with welcome reception|author=J. P.|date=15 May 1955|work=New York Times|id={{ProQuest|113436640}}}}</ref> | |||
As a result of the change in location to Pakistan, the script was altered to show Rodney Savage in command of the 1/13 Frontier Force Battalion (]), which at that time of filming was part of the 7th (Golden Arrow) Division of the ], rather than in command of a ] Battalion, the 1/13 Gorkha Rifles, as in the book.<ref name="Jacobson"/> Pakistan army and police enthusiastically assisted in the making of the film. Several Pakistan army units of the 7 Golden Arrow Division including the 5th Battalion of 13th Frontier Force Rifles (now 10 Frontier Force Regiment), 5th Probyn's Horse, 1st Battalion of 13th Frontier Force Rifles (now 7 Frontier Force Regiment), participated in the making of the film. Colonel Savage in the film is shown wearing the Golden Arrow formation sign of the Pakistan 7 Division.<ref name="Jacobson"/> | |||
Also in the movie is the 4th Battalion (Wilde's) 13th Frontier Force Rifles, the band at the Lahore Railway Station with a deer as its mascot, while the troops taking part in the train accident were from the 4/13th. The battalion has a copy of the book and autographed photographs from both Ava Gardner and Stewart Granger.{{citation needed|date=February 2024}} | |||
The future Pakistani film star ] appeared in a small role as a reporter in a crowd scene. Neelo was introduced to Cukor by A. H. Rana, the film's production manager and casting assistant in Pakistan, who worked with the film's casting director, Harvey Woods. This was her first role in a movie.{{citation needed|date=February 2020}} | |||
==Box-office== | |||
The film earned $2,075,000 in North America and $2.8 million elsewhere, making a gross profit of $1,238,000.<ref name="Mannix"/> | |||
It recorded admissions of 1,554,970 in France.<ref name="box">{{cite web|url=http://www.boxofficestory.com/box-office-ava-gardner-c24969968|title=Ava Gardner Box Office|last=Soyer|first=Renaud|first2=Didier|last2=Noisy|date=28 March 2014|work=Box Office Story|language=fr|access-date=7 June 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140919020036/http://www.boxofficestory.com/box-office-ava-gardner-c24969968|archive-date=19 September 2014}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
* ] | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
{{unreferenced|date=February 2008}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Commons category|Bhowani Junction (film)|Bhowani Junction}} | |||
* {{IMDb title|0049007|Bhowani Junction}} | |||
* {{TCMDb title|39|Bhowani Junction}} | |||
* {{AFI film|51758}} | |||
* at the ]{{better source needed|reason=Help request: a live link can be searched for at https://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web/search/expert - if available, replace the archive URL with the live link. Or if none found, remove this 'better source needed' template. | date=October 2023}} | |||
* | |||
{{George Cukor}} | |||
{{Commonscat|Bhowani Junction (film)|Bhowani Junction}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bhowani Junction}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 17:56, 21 December 2024
1956 film by George Cukor
Bhowani Junction | |
---|---|
Theatrical film poster | |
Directed by | George Cukor |
Written by | Sonya Levien Ivan Moffat |
Based on | Bhowani Junction 1954 novel by John Masters |
Produced by | Pandro S. Berman |
Starring | Ava Gardner Stewart Granger Bill Travers Abraham Sofaer Francis Matthews Lionel Jeffries |
Cinematography | Freddie Young |
Edited by | George Boemler Frank Clarke |
Music by | Miklós Rózsa |
Production company | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 110 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | $3,637,000 |
Box office | $4,875,000 |
Bhowani Junction is a 1956 British adventure drama film of the 1954 novel Bhowani Junction by John Masters. The film was directed by George Cukor and produced by Pandro S. Berman from a screenplay by Sonya Levien and Ivan Moffat.
The film stars Ava Gardner as Victoria Jones, an Anglo-Indian who has been serving in the Indian Army, and Stewart Granger as Colonel Rodney Savage, a British Indian Army officer. It also features Bill Travers, Abraham Sofaer, Francis Matthews, and Lionel Jeffries.
The film was shot in England at MGM-British Studios, Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, on the Longmoor Military Railway, and on location in Lahore, Pakistan.
Plot
India, 1947: In the final days of British rule, Victoria Jones, the beautiful daughter of an Indian mother and an English train engineer, is serving in the British Army. She returns on leave after four years to her childhood home in the fictional town of Bhowani, north-western India, where supporters of Mahatma Gandhi are campaigning for Indian independence while communists, led by a revolutionary known as Davay, foment riot and sabotage.
She becomes reacquainted with a childhood sweetheart also of Anglo-Indian heritage, rail traffic superintendent Patrick Taylor, and also with Colonel Rodney Savage, a British army officer whose Indian battalion has been posted to Bhowani to maintain law and order as British rule ends. The protesters disrupt the rail service and Savage places Victoria on duty during the crisis. He disperses the protesters violently and Victoria does not approve of his methods. She begins seriously contemplating her identity and speculates that she should marry a man from India, although clearly Taylor is still in love with her and Savage has become infatuated with her.
Walking home alone one night, Victoria is attacked and nearly raped by Captain McDaniel, one of Savage's men, but in self-defence she strikes him on the head with a steel bar and kills him. Finding her, a Sikh co-worker of Taylor's, Ranjit Kasel, takes her to his home and offers her sanctuary, introducing her to his mother, the Sadani, and to a guest in their home, Ghanshyam, who offers to hide McDaniel's body after the Sadani worries that her son Ranjit will be accused of murdering the officer.
Davay's raids on the military infrastructure continue. He blows up a train, causing numerous deaths and injuries. Victoria, influenced by her love for India, decides to marry Ranjit, but during the ceremony, fearing the complete loss of her dual race identity, suddenly flees. When an army sentry is found murdered because he saw McDaniel and Victoria together just before she killed the officer, Victoria realizes that the man in Ranjit's home, Ghanshyam, is actually Davay and that the Sadani, once a notorious Indian resistance leader, has been harboring him.
Davay kidnaps Victoria, using her to escape the city aboard her father's train. Savage and Taylor intercept the train before it reaches a tunnel, rescuing Victoria but finding Davay has gone into the tunnel with dynamite. Taylor recklessly advances into the tunnel to defuse the dynamite but is shot by Davay, who in turn is immediately shot and killed by Savage. Savage, cradling Taylor as he dies, watches the safe passage of the train. On board is Gandhi, whom Davay intended to assassinate, thereby inciting further hostilities and riots.
Savage's duty in India ends and he is summoned back to England, but his love for Victoria has become overwhelming. When she refuses to marry him and live in England, he proposes to marry but remain in India, and she accepts. Savage's superior offers to expedite his early release from military service in acknowledgement for his accomplishments.
Cast
- Ava Gardner as Victoria Jones
- Stewart Granger as Colonel Rodney Savage
- Bill Travers as Patrick Taylor
- Abraham Sofaer as Surabhai
- Francis Matthews as Ranjit Kasel
- Marne Maitland as Govindaswami
- Peter Illing as Ghanshyam aka Davay
- Edward Chapman as Thomas Jones
- Freda Jackson as the Sadani
- Lionel Jeffries as Captain Graham McDaniel
- Alan Tilvern as Ted Dunphy
- Yousaf D Hamdani as Assistant Director
- Neelo as a 15-year-old girl
- Zohra Mahmood, special appearance
Differences from novel
The film, like the original novel, portrays the Anglo-Indian protagonist, Victoria Jones, as tugged in different directions by three suitors, Col. Rodney Savage, Ranjit Kasel and Patrick Taylor, each representing a different ethnic community: British, Indian (Sikh) and Anglo-Indian, respectively. The film-makers, however, changed the novel's ending and Victoria's fate. Whereas in the novel Victoria finally seeks her future with her fellow Anglo-Indian Patrick, a railway worker, the film-makers instead matched her at the end with the more obviously dashing British officer Rodney Savage, while consigning Patrick to a heroic death. (In the writer's own depiction, in the (unfilmed) sequel "To the Coral Strand", Rodney Savage does stay on in India after the end of British rule – but he does not marry Victoria, but rather goes through many upheavals and eventually finds love with an Indian woman.)
A related issue is that in the book, Victoria Jones is described as having a distinctly brown skin, being of partly Indian ancestry. When she wears a sari, she looks very much like an Indian girl, and much of the theme of the book concerns her attraction to the idea of being exactly that. For the same reason, she is well aware that if she were to marry Savage and go with him to England, she could expect to meet social rejections from his upper class milieu. All of these factors, which have a significant influence on the personality of Victoria as depicted in the book, were profoundly changed in the film by the choice of casting the white American actress Ava Gardner for the role.
Production
The novel was the fourth by John Masters about India. MGM outbid two other studios to buy the film rights, paying more than $100,000. Ava Gardner and Stewart Granger were announced as leads almost immediately; Gardner had been on suspension at the studio for refusing to appear in Love Me or Leave Me.
George Cukor was assigned to direct. He travelled to India in October 1954 to research the movie. "I feel that for the first time India has been presented in this book as it really is, instead of the usual hokey-pokey atmosphere in which it is painted by most authors who write about it", he said.
The Indian government refused to cooperate with the production of the film.
The fictional location Bhowani Junction was in India, most probably Bhusawal. MGM had wanted to shoot the film in location in India; but, as the government of India insisted on script approval and imposed high taxes, MGM decided to film in Pakistan where the government was more welcoming.
As a result of the change in location to Pakistan, the script was altered to show Rodney Savage in command of the 1/13 Frontier Force Battalion (Coke's Rifles), which at that time of filming was part of the 7th (Golden Arrow) Division of the Pakistan Army, rather than in command of a Gurkha Battalion, the 1/13 Gorkha Rifles, as in the book. Pakistan army and police enthusiastically assisted in the making of the film. Several Pakistan army units of the 7 Golden Arrow Division including the 5th Battalion of 13th Frontier Force Rifles (now 10 Frontier Force Regiment), 5th Probyn's Horse, 1st Battalion of 13th Frontier Force Rifles (now 7 Frontier Force Regiment), participated in the making of the film. Colonel Savage in the film is shown wearing the Golden Arrow formation sign of the Pakistan 7 Division.
Also in the movie is the 4th Battalion (Wilde's) 13th Frontier Force Rifles, the band at the Lahore Railway Station with a deer as its mascot, while the troops taking part in the train accident were from the 4/13th. The battalion has a copy of the book and autographed photographs from both Ava Gardner and Stewart Granger.
The future Pakistani film star Neelo appeared in a small role as a reporter in a crowd scene. Neelo was introduced to Cukor by A. H. Rana, the film's production manager and casting assistant in Pakistan, who worked with the film's casting director, Harvey Woods. This was her first role in a movie.
Box-office
The film earned $2,075,000 in North America and $2.8 million elsewhere, making a gross profit of $1,238,000.
It recorded admissions of 1,554,970 in France.
See also
References
- ^ 'The Eddie Mannix Ledger’, Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study, Los Angeles
- Ronald, D. W.; Carter, R. J. (1974). The Longmoor Military Railway. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. p. 168. ISBN 0-7153-6357-3.
- ^ Jacobson, Andrew. "Bhowani Junction –a brief but memorable encounter with Hollywood". Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
- L. N. (28 March 1954). "Talk with john masters". New York Times. ProQuest 113010573.
- THOMAS M PRYOR (12 April 1954). "METRO BIDS HIGH FOR INDIA NOVEL". New York Times. ProQuest 113115288.
- "AVA GARDNER SET FOR FILM ON INDIA". New York Times. 14 August 1954. ProQuest 112983416.
- "George Cukor Here To Get the feel of india". The Times of India. 3 October 1954. ProQuest 608296868.
- A.H. WEILER (24 October 1954). "BY WAY OF REPORT". New York Times. ProQuest 113049044.
- J. P. (15 May 1955). "First 'invasion' of pakistan by film troupe met with welcome reception". New York Times. ProQuest 113436640.
- Soyer, Renaud; Noisy, Didier (28 March 2014). "Ava Gardner Box Office". Box Office Story (in French). Archived from the original on 19 September 2014. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
External links
- Bhowani Junction at IMDb
- Bhowani Junction at the TCM Movie Database
- Bhowani Junction at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
- Bhowani Junction at the British Film Institute
- Review of the film
- 1956 films
- 1956 romantic drama films
- British romantic drama films
- CinemaScope films
- Films about race and ethnicity
- Films based on British novels
- Films shot in Pakistan
- Films set in the British Raj
- Rail transport films
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
- Films directed by George Cukor
- Films produced by Pandro S. Berman
- Films with screenplays by Sonya Levien
- Films scored by Miklós Rózsa
- Films shot at MGM-British Studios
- 1950s English-language films
- 1950s British films
- English-language romantic drama films