Greek tragedy done Scottish style, Sunset Song is tortuous to sit through. This is Terence Davies’ (Distant Voices, Still Lives) intimate epic of tragedy and love set at the dawn of the Great War. It is about a young woman’s endurance against the hardships of rural Scottish life, based on a novel by Lewis Grassic Gibbon and told with gritty poetic realism.
Sunset Song takes work on the part of the audience. I can’t say you come out feeling great because the subject matter is so dour. It is made all the more difficult because the film unfolds at such a slow pace, with the beautiful Scottish countryside not enough to quicken the heart. While you can admire Chris for putting up with such a troubled life for so long, I was also left asking: why didn’t she turn tail and run? A clever and diligent teenager, for a time she had ambition to be a teacher.
Agyness Deyn does a fine job capturing her heart and soul. Plaudits also go to Peter Mullan, whose portrayal of the unsympathetic father quickly incurs the hatred of the audience.
Sunset Song is painted as a slice of life reality piece, reflecting the times and the place. I was thinking ‘thanks goodness I wasn’t born then and there’. So, the movie has impact, but will appeal to only a select audience. I also struggled with some of the poetic and floral language which writer and director Davies’ uses to weave his tale of angst. An elongated running time of 2 hours 15 minutes doesn’t aid the cause either. Rated M, Sunset Song scores a 6 out of 10.
Director: Terence Davies
Cast: Agyness Deyn, Kevin Guthrie, Peter Mullan, Jack Greenlees
Release Date: 1 September 2016
Rating: M
Alex First
David Edwards is the editor of The Blurb and a contributor on film and television