Songcatcher

"OK"

Songcatcher Review


Wonderfully chameleonic actress Janet McTeer ("The King Is Alive," "Tumbleweeds") gives another of her distinctive and deeply immersed performances in "Songcatcher" as a priggish 1900s music scholar.

A terse, obstinate, overeducated woman who is deeply resentful at having been passed up for a promotion to full professor at her university (in favor of a man), she abandons civilization for a spell to visit her sister (Jane Adams), a teacher at a very remote one-room school in the Appalachian Mountains.

McTeer's intense and austere performance serves the story well as her character makes the discovery of her professional life while reluctantly roughing it with the rustic locals: The isolated society of struggling mountain people has preserved, intact, for hundreds of years the Scots-Irish folk songs carried to the New World by their ancestors.

Reinvigorated by the chance to record such ancient songs for posterity, Dr. Lily Penleric (McTeer) sends for a wax cylinder phonograph and begins trekking all over the rugged mountain, asking poor homesteaders to sing for her so she can publish their songs as part of a dissertation. Met with a little enthusiasm and a lot more resistance, Dr. Penleric finds herself in the middle of long-standing conflicts between the modern world and the mountaineers' desire to preserve their lifestyle and privacy.

A strong story, well researched, written and directed by Maggie Greenwald ("The Ballad of Little Jo"), "Songcatcher" boasts a whole slew of potent performances besides just McTeer's. Aidan Quinn is almost unrecognizable as Dr. Penleric's most vocal critic, a war veteran and hardened hillbilly misanthrope who plays a mean banjo but wants no part of sharing his culture with the outside world. Pat Carroll (the voice of Ursula in "The Little Mermaid") is absolutely fantastic as Quinn's mother, the choleric matriarch of the mountain who eventually warms to Penleric. 13-year-old Emmy Rossum -- a veteran of both soap operas and real opera (she has performed in more than 20 productions at the Met) -- is spellbinding as Deladis, a girl with a beautiful singing voice who is the first to truly befriend this initially overbearing outsider.

The music in "Songcatcher" is at least as memorable and moving as the acting, although a little bit of sharp-key warble-and-banjo goes a long way. But as the film progresses, hackneyed characters and obligatory episodes begin to muscle in on the story, sending it into a bit of a downward spiral.

There's a turncoat yokel who "has had the privilege of education" and now works for a coal company trying to buy land out from under his own kind. There's a mountain mama birthin' scene. There are city folk who consider the Appalachians "savages" and say stupid things like "if we teach them to drink tea, they'll want refinement," as if "they" weren't standing right there.

But the real problem is that from the early going it's clear that "Songcatcher" is the kind of movie in which people's lives have to take a turn for the worse sooner or later. That's why the turncoat carries a gun. That's why there's this silly set-up about a panther being in the woods. And why else would Penleric's schoolteacher sister turn out to be a lesbian except to be persecuted by these backward people? After all, in the movies nobody can be gay before 1970 without tragic consequences.

Oh, and let's not forget the overriding last reel lesson about What's Really Important In Life (in the case of Penleric, that would be her unexpected romance with the Quinn character).

I was quite taken by "Songcatcher" and the unswerving sincerity of the major characters. But I found myself so disappointed by the formulaic elements, which all but take over the narrative, that my enthusiasm became more and more diminished the longer the movie played. There's a lot of heart here, and a lot of devotion to the music and the vanishing culture in which it flourished. Those feelings may prevail for some, but there's no denying the banal embellishments are a drag on the picture's merit.



Songcatcher

Facts and Figures

Run time: 109 mins

In Theaters: Thursday 1st March 2001

Box Office USA: $1.6M

Distributed by: Lions Gate

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 2.5 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 74%
Fresh: 65 Rotten: 23

IMDB: 7.2 / 10

Cast & Crew

Starring: as Professor Lily Penleric, PhD, as Dean Arthur Pembroke, as Professor Wallace Aldrich, PhD

Contactmusic


Links


New Movies

Star Wars: The Last Jedi Movie Review

Star Wars: The Last Jedi Movie Review

After the thunderous reception for J.J. Abrams' Episode VII: The Force Awakens two years ago,...

Daddy's Home 2 Movie Review

Daddy's Home 2 Movie Review

Like the 2015 original, this comedy plays merrily with cliches to tell a silly story...

The Man Who Invented Christmas Movie Review

The Man Who Invented Christmas Movie Review

There's a somewhat contrived jauntiness to this blending of fact and fiction that may leave...

Ferdinand Movie Review

Ferdinand Movie Review

This animated comedy adventure is based on the beloved children's book, which was published in...

Brigsby Bear Movie Review

Brigsby Bear Movie Review

Director Dave McCary makes a superb feature debut with this offbeat black comedy, which explores...

Battle of the Sexes Movie Review

Battle of the Sexes Movie Review

A dramatisation of the real-life clash between tennis icons Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs,...

Shot Caller Movie Review

Shot Caller Movie Review

There isn't much subtlety to this prison thriller, but it's edgy enough to hold the...

Advertisement
The Disaster Artist Movie Review

The Disaster Artist Movie Review

A hilariously outrageous story based on real events, this film recounts the making of the...

Stronger Movie Review

Stronger Movie Review

Based on a true story about the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, this looks like one...

Only the Brave Movie Review

Only the Brave Movie Review

Based on a genuinely moving true story, this film undercuts the realism by pushing its...

Wonder Movie Review

Wonder Movie Review

This film may be based on RJ Palacio's fictional bestseller, but it approaches its story...

Happy End  Movie Review

Happy End Movie Review

Austrian auteur Michael Haneke isn't known for his light touch, but rather for hard-hitting, award-winning...

Patti Cake$ Movie Review

Patti Cake$ Movie Review

Seemingly from out of nowhere, this film generates perhaps the biggest smile of any movie...

The Limehouse Golem Movie Review

The Limehouse Golem Movie Review

A Victorian thriller with rather heavy echoes of Jack the Ripper, this film struggles to...

Advertisement
Artists
Actors
    Filmmakers
      Artists
      Bands
        Musicians
          Artists
          Celebrities
             
              Artists
              Interviews