Esther Waters is a 1948 British drama film directed by Ian Dalrymple and Peter Proud and starring Kathleen Ryan, Dirk Bogarde (first credited film appearance), and Cyril Cusack.[1] It is an adaptation of the 1894 novel Esther Waters by George Moore.[2]
Esther Waters | |
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Directed by | Ian Dalrymple Peter Proud |
Written by | Michael Gordon William Rose Gerard Tyrrell (Additional dialogue) |
Based on | Esther Waters by George Moore |
Produced by | Ian Dalrymple Peter Proud |
Starring | Kathleen Ryan Dirk Bogarde |
Cinematography | C.M. Pennington-Richards H.E. Fowle |
Edited by | Brereton Porter |
Music by | Gordon Jacob (as Dr. Gordon Jacob) |
Production companies | Independent Producers Wessex Film Productions |
Distributed by | General Film Distributors (UK) |
Release date | 22 September 1948 (London) |
Running time | 108 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £338,551 |
Box office | £47,700 (by Dec 1949) |
The film is set in London in 1875.
Esther (Kathleen Ryan) goes into domestic service as a maid, only to be seduced by sweet-talking footman William (Dirk Bogarde). When he abandons her, she must deal with not only pregnancy but also her mother's death. She struggles to survive with only herself for comfort and strength.
She is forced to put her child into care in order to keep her job.
The movie was Dirk Bogarde's first film as a leading man, when he replaced Stewart Granger, who dropped out.[3][4]
The Radio Times wrote:
"George Moore's source novel was strongly influenced by the naturalism of Emile Zola, but there is little of the earthiness of the original in this tawdry adaptation, which rapidly plunges between the two stools of heritage production and sensationalist melodrama. Dirk Bogarde is suitably scurrilous as a rascally footman, but the action slows fatally when he is off screen, with Kathleen Ryan in the title role facing all her trials (single motherhood, the workhouse and Bogarde's drinking) with sulkiness rather than dignity and determination. The horse-racing scenes are efficiently presented, but Ian Dalrymple and Peter Proud direct with heavy hands"[5]
TV Guide called the film "A well-done but melancholy costume drama from the book by the Irish playwright and critic George Moore, a cofounder of the theatre group that led to the famous Abbey Theatre."[6]
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