IMDb RATING
5.6/10
4.4K
YOUR RATING
A true tale of love, liberty and scandal amongst the Edwardian artists' colony in Cornwall in 1914.A true tale of love, liberty and scandal amongst the Edwardian artists' colony in Cornwall in 1914.A true tale of love, liberty and scandal amongst the Edwardian artists' colony in Cornwall in 1914.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 3 nominations total
Tom Ward-Thomas
- Frank
- (as Tom Ward Thomas)
Ollie Marsden
- Walter
- (as Ollie Smith)
Roger Ashton-Griffiths
- Jory
- (as Roger Ashton Griffiths)
Featured reviews
Having read the book several times, to see the film was an absolute 'must'. It would have been difficult to adapt the whole story to screen, particularly into 100 minutes, the consequence of which, those who have not read the book may not easily grasp the real intricacies and make-up of some of the characters. However, it is a beautiful film, beautifully made. The music and the photography contribute in a magical but powerful way and all the actors play their characters superbly. It was obviously made with passion. It is a haunting and heartbreaking story, one that can be thought provoking. "Summer In February" is an emotional journey, but certainly one worth taking. I intend to see it again soon. Very soon.
Once I got past the 'machine-knitted' hand-knits and the Mills and Boon score . . . perfectly watchable. Don't expect to be informed about artistic life or how to learn to draw and paint. I have got to say I think Emily Browning was miscast; though delightfully dinky and looking marvellous in her lace blouses and smocks . . she did not convey privileged entitlement or fragile mentality very well, not exactly wooden but leaning towards wet lettuce leaf. I feel a proper Cornish artist boho would be perfectly happy to be in love with two lovely men . . so bit of a plot hole there. The actress that played Laura Knight was perfect. Although location spotting was fun and authentic . . nothing else was. It seemed to lack real Cornishness . . a huge failing for me. Had I been directing I would have gone even more up the cheesy Mills and Boon route with it. Sorry but I was disappoint.
I went to this blind, as it were, not having read any reviews on here - I think this is probably the first - nor any of the critic reviews in the papers. I am a little surprised that it is showing so low on the star rating as, for myself and my wife, it was a throughly entertaining evening at the cinema. I knew very little about the Newlyn artistic set before but it would appear to have been as incestuous and fraught with failed and doomed relationships as the Bloomsbury literary group of a couple of decades later. Enter Florence, fresh from an overbearing father in London, to visit her brother who was already part of the set. Her beauty turns more than a few heads and A.J.Munnings, a wild and poetry-spouting bohemian, persuades her to sit as a model - and attempts to teach her the rudiments of drawing. Gilbert, in some ways the major-domo of the group but not an artist himself, also falls for Florence but she sees in him many of the traits of her strait-laced father and when Munnings proposes to her she accepts. Tragedy, as we will have garnered from what has gone before, will inevitably follow. The photography and cinematography is a pleasure to the eye and the producer has taken pains to get the period correct. Where it slightly falls down is in the character of Florence who, I have since learnt, was already unsettled and a depressive before she arrived at Lamorna. This would account for her later actions but we get no sense of her instability in the first half of the film. There may be an over-emphasis on "all down the pub for a jolly good drink and a sing-along and pay the landlord with a quick 10 second sketch for the bill" but overall we felt sufficiently interested in the history portrayed by the movie to do some subsequent research on the real characters portrayed.
It's beautifully acted and shot. Christopher Menaul, the director behind Belonging, Feast of July, Above Suspicion, 1st Night, Treatment and Punters, brings us this blob of nothingness. It's a true tale of love, liberty and scandal amongst the Edwardian artists' colony in Cornwall. I thought this film was fantastic in some ways and terrible in others. There's something for everyone here, though the two male leads were overcast. I refuse to totally dismiss this, because I find it quite engaging. The film's screenplay is tight and well-written, and worthy of praise. An intelligent script, with direction that does it justice. As a final rating, it receives 7 out of 10 from this reviewer.
Okay so this is no masterpiece but 5.3 out of 10 is rather harsh, the story is what it is (based on book around true events), its not shot or acted overly badly (although I must admit I'm not totally convinced by Emily Browning) and the scenery and paintings are attractive which in turn means, I think at least, its not a bad way to spend just under two hours of your time.
Why has is been so badly review then, I have no idea I happen to quite like it not because its monumental, makes me cry with sadness or leap with joy, but because it quietly and affectively tells a story worth being told. Perhaps the bad reviews reflect more of disaffection with the story rather than the vehicle of its portrayal. Either way if you like period dramas and have the time on your hands give a go and see what you think.
Why has is been so badly review then, I have no idea I happen to quite like it not because its monumental, makes me cry with sadness or leap with joy, but because it quietly and affectively tells a story worth being told. Perhaps the bad reviews reflect more of disaffection with the story rather than the vehicle of its portrayal. Either way if you like period dramas and have the time on your hands give a go and see what you think.
Did you know
- TriviaHattie Morahan, Dan Stevens and Dominic Cooper appear on Sense & Sensibility (2008) as Elinor Dashwood, Edward Ferrars and John Willoughby, respectively.
- GoofsAt the races the union flag is flying upside down.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Birdwatcher: Oh, look.
Birdwatcher: Common gulls, do you think?
Birdwatcher: Yes, I would think... I don't know. Maybe.
[then her binoculars happen upon a nude model being painted]
- SoundtracksSiren's Lullaby
Music by Benjamin Wallfisch
Lyrics by Joanna Wallfisch
Performed by Eleanor Bowers Jolley
Chamber Orchestra of London
Published by Du Vinage Publishing Ltd
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Літо в лютому
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- £5,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,624
- Gross worldwide
- $605,403
- Runtime
- 1h 40m(100 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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