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Hungry Hill

  • 1947
  • Approved
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
610
YOUR RATING
Margaret Lockwood in Hungry Hill (1947)
Hungry Hill: This Land Belongs To Us
Play clip1:52
Watch Hungry Hill: This Land Belongs To Us
1 Video
22 Photos
Drama

Story of a feud that has gone on between two Irish families for more than 50 years.Story of a feud that has gone on between two Irish families for more than 50 years.Story of a feud that has gone on between two Irish families for more than 50 years.

  • Director
    • Brian Desmond Hurst
  • Writers
    • Daphne Du Maurier
    • Terence Young
    • Francis Crowdy
  • Stars
    • Margaret Lockwood
    • Dennis Price
    • Cecil Parker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    610
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Brian Desmond Hurst
    • Writers
      • Daphne Du Maurier
      • Terence Young
      • Francis Crowdy
    • Stars
      • Margaret Lockwood
      • Dennis Price
      • Cecil Parker
    • 14User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Hungry Hill: This Land Belongs To Us
    Clip 1:52
    Hungry Hill: This Land Belongs To Us

    Photos22

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    Top cast47

    Edit
    Margaret Lockwood
    Margaret Lockwood
    • Fanny Rosa
    Dennis Price
    Dennis Price
    • Greyhound John
    Cecil Parker
    Cecil Parker
    • Copper John
    Dermot Walsh
    Dermot Walsh
    • Wild Johnnie
    Michael Denison
    Michael Denison
    • Henry Brodrick
    F.J. McCormick
    F.J. McCormick
    • Old Tim
    Arthur Sinclair
    • Morty Donovan
    Jean Simmons
    Jean Simmons
    • Jane Brodrick
    Eileen Crowe
    • Bridget
    Eileen Herlie
    Eileen Herlie
    • Katherine
    Barbara Waring
    • Barbara Brodrick
    Michael Golden
    • Sam Donovan
    Shamus Locke
    Shamus Locke
    • Young Tim
    Siobhan McKenna
    Siobhan McKenna
    • Kate Donovan
    • (as Sioban McKenna)
    Dan O'Herlihy
    Dan O'Herlihy
    • Harry Brodrick
    Tony Quinn
    • Denny Donovan
    Tony Wager
    Tony Wager
    • Young Wild Johnnie
    • (as Anthony Wager)
    Hector MacGregor
    Hector MacGregor
    • Nicholson
    • (as Hector McGregor)
    • Director
      • Brian Desmond Hurst
    • Writers
      • Daphne Du Maurier
      • Terence Young
      • Francis Crowdy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    6.1610
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    Featured reviews

    5jem132

    Bleak social drama with Lockwood and Price

    A film adaptation of a (lesser-known) Daphne Du Maurier novel, HUNGRY HILL offers an interesting, yet mostly bleak look at social divide. This costume drama juxtaposes the bourgeois copper mine owners the Brodricks with the working family the Donovans, paralleling their lives and constant feuding over a 50 year-period.

    Margaret Lockwood gets first billing as Fanny Rose, who marries into the wealthy Brodrick family. Miss Lockwood gets one of the better parts on offer here, her character arc changing from a wilful coquette to a bright young married, and then finally to an elderly widowed woman looking back on life. Dennis Price plays her husband, who wishes to reconcile with the Donovan clan. Cecil Parker is memorable as the head of the family, whilst a young and lovely Jean Simmons appears briefly as Jane, younger sister of Price.

    The bleakness of the source material does not give the film much to work with, and the film is often talky and mundane in many stretches. The production values, while adequate enough, do not really enhance the work. It's just not great drama.

    Perhaps the most interesting part of the film is seeing young Michael Dennison do a fairly credible job in the sort of role that either James Mason (bound for America) or Stewart Granger would have performed with aplomb back in the early 40's. He plays spoiled Henry Brodrick, son of Lockwood and Price, who re-ignites the tension between the two families after a brief stalemate. Dennison seems to be channelling the Mason we saw in Gainsborough melodramas such as THE MAN IN GREY and FANNY BY GASLIGHT in his venom-spitting scenes. His character is really quite hateful, yet his indulgence in such vices as drinking, gambling, women and even murder provide a bit of spark to the proceedings.

    5/10.
    8clanciai

    The Irish fighting it out for 50 years over a mine, women and whisky

    Margaret Lockwood is excellent, especially as she ages, from a rather wild young woman to a pathetic addict in London, exiled from Ireland by her own son, ruining herself at the roulette.

    Everything in this film is about the same vein: tragedy as the result of self abuse, recklessness, whisky, brawls and terrible conflicts lasting over 50 years, as these hard-headed Irish never can take it easy and always are carried away by their bad temper. The exception is Dennis Price, the one with a diplomatic talent and some human understanding crossing the limitations of self-centredness, while his father Cecil Parker is the most impossible of all starting all the trouble and beating his grandson into a rogue.

    It's all very Irish, you have seen it all before, they never change but stick to cultivating their hard heads making it worse by revelling in whisky, and there will always be hard relentless fights for nothing. After 50 years, according to this story, there is at last peace between the two families, but how long will it last? Probably not any longer than at most until the civil war with mad dogs and Irishmen, unionists and nationalists; but the film is worth seeing for Margaret Lockwood and Dennis Price, and another thing: the famous ball scene, when the fiddler gets too eager and leaves his pianist behind, bolting into a general gig of astounding dimensions, leading the entire ball into an orgy of dancing in the garden. It's a splendid scene, which hardly ever has been surpassed, until the latest "Anna Karenina" version 2012 with Keira Knightley with a similar ball scene transcending the stage.
    5malcolmgsw

    costume drama

    This film was recently shown as part of the BBCs season of British films.It is a costume drama which seemed to be a staple diet of cinema going in the 1940s.the cast is fairly distinguished including Margaaret Lockwood,Dennis Price,Michael Dennison and Dermot Walsh.They seem to be playing the type of parts which had become their métier during this period.The problem is that there is no dynamism either about the acting or writing to give the film that spark.Perhaps it needed a mean and moody Mason to bring the film to life.I have to say that at times i found the film to be rather dull and tepid.There were lots of sequences to do with mines but this was already a bit of a cliché by the time this film was released.
    5bkoganbing

    The Brodricks And The Donovans

    Daphne DuMaurier helped adapt one of her lesser known novels, Hungry Hill to the big screen in 1947. Possibly the problem is that it is one of his lesser known novels and was not that good a read to begin with.

    Hungry Hill is where a copper mine is started by Cecil Parker the head of the Brodrick clan and Parker's his usual arrogant self once again on the screen. This piece of property the other family, the Donovans, feel the Brodricks cheated them out of way back when so this was an ongoing feud when the viewer enters the picture. When the mine opens the head of the Donovans, Arthur Sinclair, pronounces a curse on the Brodricks.

    The Brodricks due seem like a cursed clan, but the curse also seems to ring down on the Donovans as well over the three generations that this tale is told.

    The primary characters are Margaret Lockwood who marries into the Brodricks and Dennis Price who becomes a lawyer and tries not to have anything to do with the mine. They raise a new generation of Brodricks who have their own problems with the Donovans, especially young Dermot Walsh.

    Cecil Parker being the fatuous oaf he is turns out to be a great businessman, but that's about all he is. He makes mistakes in the raising of both his son and grandson that really are the cause of a lot of the issues.

    Jean Simmons has a brief role as Dennis Price's sister who I wish we had seen more of. She's in at the beginning and then we're told she marries an army man and is now in India. Smart girl, she showed sense in getting away from the Hungry Hill curse.

    Hungry Hill moves at way too slow a pace. It's like a British version of The Magnificent Ambersons, the director's vision of Ambersons that is. Maybe it needed someone like Orson Welles at the helm.
    5blanche-2

    Adapted from a Daphne DuMaurier novel

    "Hungry Hill," based on a novel by Daphne DuMaurier, concerns a 50-plus year family feud between copper mine owners, the Brodricks, and the people who work for them, the Donovans.

    The film stars Margaret Lockwood as Fanny Rosa, who marries Dennis Price, known as "Greyhound John Brodrick" because he breeds greyhounds. His father (Cecil Parker) is Copper John. A very young and lovely Jean Simmons has a small role as Price's sister.

    Fanny and Greyhound John have several children, one of whom is Henry (Michael Dennison), who becomes a wild child when he grows up. As someone else mentioned, Dennison is very much like James Mason. We get to see Lockwood as a flirtatious young woman, a settled married one, and finally, an elderly widow.

    The film is somewhat slow, but though it is in black and white, you can see the beauty and luxury of the 19th century costumes.

    For some reason the characters were hard to connect to, with the possible exception of Lockwood. She is the thread who goes throughout the film, and we see some real character development. It's a very good performance.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Both Margaret Lockwood and Jean Simmons previously appeared in Give Us the Moon (1944). Simmons would later appear in a long-gestating project that at one point was to star Lockwood, The Blue Lagoon (1949).
    • Goofs
      Siobhan McKenna misspelled in opening credit roll as Sioban McKenna.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Terence Young: Bond Vivant (2000)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 5, 1947 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Dealul flămând
    • Filming locations
      • Denham Film Studios, Denham, Uxbridge, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(studio: made at Denham Studios, London, England.)
    • Production company
      • Two Cities Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 32m(92 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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