The
Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry.
Director:
Hettie Macdonald. Distributed by: EntertainmentOne . Based on: The Unlikely
Pilgrimage of Harold Fry; by Rachel Joyce. Screenplay by Rachel Joyce. Produced
by:Kevin Loader; Juliet Dowling Marilyn Milgrom
Production
companies: Ingenious Media Film 4; Embankment. Palace Cinemas. May 18 2023
Reviewed
by Peter Wilkins
It seems
most unlikely that a man would walk almost five hundred miles along the length
of England to visit a friend in a hospice. And yet that is what Harold Fry (Jim
Broadbent) does after he receives a note from a former colleague at his local
brewery to tell him that she is dying and is writing to say goodbye. But why
walk? Why not drive or catch a train?
|
Jim Broadbent as Harold Fry |
It soon
becomes clear in Hettie Macdonald’s film of Rachel Joyce’s The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry that Fry is driven by more
than a need to visit his dying friend, Queenie Hennessey (Linda Bassett). From the very outset Philippa Hart’s set
decoration of Fry’s house suggests a
sterility that scars the love and
tenderness between Fry and his wife Maureen(Penelope Wilton) An air of loss
hangs over the couple. Their life appears empty; their relationship somehow
hollowed by unfinished business. A chance conversation with a shop attendant
about how faith healed her aunt’s cancer became Fry’s road to Damascus epiphany
and he kept walking on his personal Camino from Devon in the south to Berwick
on Tweed in the north to keep Queenie alive.
Writer
Joyce has also written the screenplay to display the novel’s allegorical nature.
Gradually Fry’s pilgrimage of faith reveals a religious parallel with Christ’s life.
He inadvertently heals a gay man’s torment over his love for a younger man. Martina
(Monika Gossmann), a Slovak doctor, forced to survive as a toilet cleaner in a
land where her professional qualifications are not recognized washes Fry’s
bruised and infected feet. Along the way he gathers followers inspired by his
example. At one point he is confronted by the betrayal of his troubled
companion Wilf (Daniel Frogson). Ultimately his pilgrim’s progress affords the healing power of catharsis.
Throughout
the spectre of grief and guilt haunts his journey. Images of his son’s
self-destruction torment his memories, with horrifying interpolations of Earl
Cave’s torturous performance as Maureen and Harold’s son David. There is a raw
simplicity to Macdonald’s film. It could have been easily filmed in black and
white for its absence of colour. Only the
tshirts emblazoned with the word Pilgrim give some hint of a pilgrimage
turned into a festivity, which eventually must be abandoned. At one point Fry
gazes out at the unadorned natural beauty of the landscape as he pursues his
journey through a landscape contrasrted as times by the simple villages along
the way and the plagued memories of David. At another point his walk takes him
past the towering satanic industrial chimneys. Fry’s arduous trek becomes a
metaphor for a nation divided. |
Penelope Wilton as Maureen Fry |
As Fry,
driven by faith and a need for absolution, Broadbent is superb. Close-ups
reveal a face that exhibits an encyclopaedia of thought and feeling. His pain
is palpable. His resolve admirable and his faith unassailable. As his wife,
Wilton’s performance is heartrending, a portrayal of the devastated but loyal
partner. The pathos is unbearable, her suffering utterly believable. Cave’s
portrayal of David is immensely disturbing, a graphic insight into the perils
of failed communication and misunderstanding. Macdonald’s casting is brilliant
and there is also strong support from the sympathetic and understanding
neighbour Rex (Joseph Mydell).The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold
Fry is an
unpretentious film faithfully brought to life by Joyce’s adaptation of her
novel and carefully and truthfully directed by Macdonald who has obviously
observed the key themes of Joyce’s tribute to faith and the simple Everyman,
played so sensitively by Broadbent. The film is
a testament to the human spirit while also issuing a warning to a
society that loses the capacity to care.