The Horse's Mouth (1958) - Turner Classic Movies

The Horse's Mouth


1h 36m 1958
The Horse's Mouth

Brief Synopsis

An unscrupulous artist fights to realize his vision of the perfect mural.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Adaptation
Release Date
Nov 1958
Premiere Information
New York opening: 11 Nov 1958
Production Company
Knightsbridge Films, Ltd.
Distribution Company
Lopert Films, Inc.; United Artists Corp.
Country
Great Britain and United States
Location
London, England, Great Britain; London, England, United Kingdom; London,United Kingdom
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Horse's Mouth by Joyce Cary (London, 1944).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 36m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.66 : 1

Synopsis

In London, artist Gulley Jimson is released from prison after serving a month's sentence for being a public nuisance. Frustrated by a shortage of funds, Gulley immediately resumes his harassment of wealthy Mr. Hickson, who owns several of Gulley's paintings sold to him by Gulley's ex-wife Sarah Monday. Familiar with Gulley's determined and imaginative attempts to con him out of the paintings or money, Hickson refuses all of the painter's calls. Gulley then turns to pub owner "Cookie" D. Coker for a loan, and explains his intention to retrieve his paintings in order to sell them to art aficionado Sir William Beeder. When Gulley assures Cookie that he will pay his outstanding bar bill in full once he makes the sale, she agrees to a small loan. The next morning, concern over her investment prompts Cookie to visit Gulley on board his houseboat home where she insists that he demand his share of the painting proceeds from Sarah. Gulley reluctantly agrees, but when they arrive at Sarah's, the painter falls into a romantic reverie recalling the early days of his marriage. When Sarah explains that she sold Gulley's works to pay off his enormous debt, Cookie insists that Sarah has swindled Gulley. Sarah agrees to write a note to Hickson acknowledging the sale of eighteen paintings and admits that one painting was lost. Gulley and Cookie take the note to Hickson who points out that he owes Gulley nothing as he has already given the artist a number of loans. Hickson does agree, however, to give Gulley two pounds a week in exchange for the artist's promise to cease hounding him. Hickson also reveals that Sarah has retained one painting, the well-known Woman in the Bath. When Gulley and Cookie show no sign of leaving, Hickson summons a constable forcing Gulley to flee without remanding any money. Gulley then visits art patrons Lord and Lady Beeder at their luxury apartment where he learns from their private secretary, A. W. Arnold Alabaster, that the couple is leaving on a six-week trip to Bermuda the following day. Captivated by a large bare wall in the Beeder's apartment, Gulley offers to sell Sir William the Woman in the Bath and paint a mural of the resurrection of Lazarus on the wall for free. Sir William, a close friend of Hickson's, agrees to consider the offer, but wonders how Gulley will get the painting. Hoping to win the couple's favor, Gulley counsels Lady Beeder to continue her interest in water colors and to learn the difference between success and failure in the art world. Later, Gulley's enthusiastic drinking results in his passing out and he is carried to Arnold's room. Awakening the following day to discover that the Beeders have departed, Gulley persuades the house cleaner to give him the apartment keys. Dressed in Sir William's clothes, Gulley convinces the skeptical concierge that he is staying at the Beeders' with their permission, then sneaks out to pawn their valuable clock. With the help of a young painting apprentice and friend named Nosey, Gulley rounds up a number of props and various models for his mural. After several days, fellow artist and sculpter Abel discovers that Gulley is living at the Beeders' apartment, and, to the painter's annoyance, insists upon sharing the luxurious digs. Despite Gulley's protestations, Abel moves in and arranges for the delivery of an enormous marble block, which crashes through the top floor of the apartment. Undeterred, Abel takes up sculpting and Nosey tends to the men and their models. Several weeks later, Abel and Gulley quarrel about the merit of their finished works and Gulley sadly agrees that his mural does not live up to his expectations. When the Beeders return, they are stunned by the condition of their apartment and Gulley hastily returns to his houseboat. He discovers Cookie there, as she has lost her pub and apartment due to her association with an "ex-con." Saddened by Cookie's news that Hickson has passed away, Gulley is then startled to find out that Hickson willed his paintings to the nation. Days later at the Hickson exhibition of his paintings, Gulley runs into Sarah, and, hoping to wheedle her out of the Woman in the Bath, takes her home. Sarah passes a package off as the painting, but after Gulley realizes she has tricked him, he returns, yet Sarah refuses to surrender the painting. Angry and frustrated, Gulley moves out of his houseboat to an abandoned building scheduled for demolition. Hoping to inspire Gulley to resume painting, Nosey points out a large bare wall in the building and soon Gulley is planning another mural, offering lessons in exchange for students providing supplies and help in painting his rendition of Noah's ark. The completed project so impresses the neighbors that they unite to prevent the building's demolition. To spare the workmen feeling guilty, Gulley then destroys the wall with a bulldozer. Pleased to have united the community in an appreciation of art and determined to continue living in his own way, Gulley then returns to his houseboat and, as Cookie and Nosey wave goodbye, sails down the Thames alone in search of more artistic adventures.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Adaptation
Release Date
Nov 1958
Premiere Information
New York opening: 11 Nov 1958
Production Company
Knightsbridge Films, Ltd.
Distribution Company
Lopert Films, Inc.; United Artists Corp.
Country
Great Britain and United States
Location
London, England, Great Britain; London, England, United Kingdom; London,United Kingdom
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Horse's Mouth by Joyce Cary (London, 1944).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 36m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.66 : 1

Award Nominations

Best Writing, Screenplay

1959
Alec Guinness

Articles

The Horse's Mouth


Winner of a Best Actor Academy Award the previous year for The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), Alec Guinness received his first and only writing nomination for his first and only screenplay with The Horse's Mouth (1958), a witty and quirky tale of a difficult but dedicated painter. In Gulley Jimson, Guinness gave himself a truly memorable character with plenty of opportunities for both wickedly funny and poignant, near tragic moments as he battles conventional society and the misfits closest to him in his quest for artistic integrity...and enough money to at least keep his ramshackle houseboat-studio afloat and pay his debts to Coker, his long-suffering on-and-off barmaid sweetheart.

The story was not original to Guinness; in fact, he wasn't the first to think of bringing it to the screen. The character was created by well-respected novelist Joyce Cary in his 1944 novel of the same title. Actor Claude Rains was very attracted to the idea of playing Gulley and sent director Ronald Neame the book hoping to make a film adaptation with him. Neame, however, found he couldn't even get through the novel and thought the whole story unfilmable. A few years later, Guinness, now an international star thanks to a string of successful British comedies he made beginning in 1949 (including his first movie with Neame, The Card, 1952), brought the book to the director again and urged him to reconsider. This time, Neame found that he loved the story and the character, but he still considered it impossible to put on screen. Guinness asked if he might have a go at the screenplay, and Neame answered with an enthusiastic "yes." What the actor came up with, Neame later said, was only a fraction of the book but one that captured the essence of the story and the character, even with some scenes completely invented by Guinness, such as the wealthy patrons falling through a hole in the floor wrapped in a large carpet, a piece of comic business later used by Blake Edwards in S.O.B. (1981).

With The Horse's Mouth, Neame, Guinness, and producer John Bryan were able to make a film about an artist that avoided the often somber and reverent tones of biographies about real-life painters. In building a story around a fictional painter they ran into the problem of what his art would look like and who would create it for the film. To fit the character, they needed someone very talented, contemporary, and provocative. The eminent art historian Sir Kenneth Clarke led them to John Bratby, a founder of what was known as the "kitchen sink" school of art, highly influential in Britain in the 1950s and strongly expressionistic in approach. The term, in fact, had been coined by a critic writing about a painting of Bratby's depicting a kitchen sink, seeing in it a trend among young painters to depict domestic scenes stressing the banality and griminess of daily life in working class England. (The term was also applied to new works of drama by the likes of John Osborne, author of the 1956 play Look Back in Anger, which transformed British theater during this period.)

Neame and company were fascinated by Bratby's way of working, squeezing large dollops of paint directly from tube onto the canvas and then working these thick globs of color with a palette knife. The method was costly (a great deal of paint ended up on the studio floor) but Neame and his cinematographer Arthur Ibbetson (whom Neame had promoted from camera operator on this picture) loved the way Bratby's technique imparted a natural depth to the paintings' surfaces that, when lit at a three-quarter angle, gave a strength, intensity, and texture to the work that could never have been achieved by a brush. Guinness often visited Bratby when he was working, observing his movements and moods (the real-life artist was frequently as roguish and contrary as the on-screen painter). When Bratby's wife saw the movie, she was able to pick out the visual bits that the actor had keenly lifted from his model.

Although Guinness regarded The Horse's Mouth as one of his finest works, its reception among British critics was only lukewarm. Some carped at its failure to fully capture Cary's novel, while others found the lead performance self-indulgent and gimmicky. But it was well-regarded enough within the country's film industry to earn Guinness a British Academy Award nomination for his screenplay and another for Kay Walsh's supporting performance as his loyal girlfriend. The Horse's Mouth was much better received outside of England. Walsh won the US National Board of Review award for Best Supporting Actress, and Guinness received Best Actor awards in festivals at Venice and Barcelona. The picture was also a hit in the Soviet Union, where it was popular for its depiction of an artist in conflict with capitalist society. The Horse's Mouth was even selected for a Royal Premiere charity screening in the presence of Queen Elizabeth II and the Queen Mother at the Empire Leicester Square theater in February 1959.

An interesting note about this film's exhibition in the U.S.: When it played at the Paris cinema in New York, the opening short was the first film by noted documentarian D.A. Pennebaker, who later created such films as the Bob Dylan documentary Don't Look Back (1967) and The War Room (1993) about Bill Clinton's 1992 presidential campaign. The theater's manager originally offered to buy Pennebaker's impressionistic piece about the soon-to-be-demolished Third Avenue El train for $100, telling the artist that was a far better deal than just renting it for the short period that foreign films usually played at the Paris. Instead, the director opted for a $25 per week rental rate, which turned out to be more lucrative when The Horse's Mouth proved to be a big hit with Manhattan audiences and was held over for many weeks. Pennebaker's short is now included in the Criterion Collection DVD release of the Guinness picture.

Director: Ronald Neame
Producers: Albert Fennell, John Bryan, Ronald Neame
Screenplay: Alec Guinness, based on the novel by Joyce Cary
Cinematography: Arthur Ibbetson
Editing: Anne V. Coates
Art Direction: William C. Andrews
Paintings by John Bratby
Cast: Alec Guinness (Gulley Jimson), Kay Walsh (Coker), Renee Houston (Sara), Mike Morgan (Nosey), Robert Coote (Sir William Beeder).
C-97m.

by Rob Nixon
The Horse's Mouth

The Horse's Mouth

Winner of a Best Actor Academy Award the previous year for The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), Alec Guinness received his first and only writing nomination for his first and only screenplay with The Horse's Mouth (1958), a witty and quirky tale of a difficult but dedicated painter. In Gulley Jimson, Guinness gave himself a truly memorable character with plenty of opportunities for both wickedly funny and poignant, near tragic moments as he battles conventional society and the misfits closest to him in his quest for artistic integrity...and enough money to at least keep his ramshackle houseboat-studio afloat and pay his debts to Coker, his long-suffering on-and-off barmaid sweetheart. The story was not original to Guinness; in fact, he wasn't the first to think of bringing it to the screen. The character was created by well-respected novelist Joyce Cary in his 1944 novel of the same title. Actor Claude Rains was very attracted to the idea of playing Gulley and sent director Ronald Neame the book hoping to make a film adaptation with him. Neame, however, found he couldn't even get through the novel and thought the whole story unfilmable. A few years later, Guinness, now an international star thanks to a string of successful British comedies he made beginning in 1949 (including his first movie with Neame, The Card, 1952), brought the book to the director again and urged him to reconsider. This time, Neame found that he loved the story and the character, but he still considered it impossible to put on screen. Guinness asked if he might have a go at the screenplay, and Neame answered with an enthusiastic "yes." What the actor came up with, Neame later said, was only a fraction of the book but one that captured the essence of the story and the character, even with some scenes completely invented by Guinness, such as the wealthy patrons falling through a hole in the floor wrapped in a large carpet, a piece of comic business later used by Blake Edwards in S.O.B. (1981). With The Horse's Mouth, Neame, Guinness, and producer John Bryan were able to make a film about an artist that avoided the often somber and reverent tones of biographies about real-life painters. In building a story around a fictional painter they ran into the problem of what his art would look like and who would create it for the film. To fit the character, they needed someone very talented, contemporary, and provocative. The eminent art historian Sir Kenneth Clarke led them to John Bratby, a founder of what was known as the "kitchen sink" school of art, highly influential in Britain in the 1950s and strongly expressionistic in approach. The term, in fact, had been coined by a critic writing about a painting of Bratby's depicting a kitchen sink, seeing in it a trend among young painters to depict domestic scenes stressing the banality and griminess of daily life in working class England. (The term was also applied to new works of drama by the likes of John Osborne, author of the 1956 play Look Back in Anger, which transformed British theater during this period.) Neame and company were fascinated by Bratby's way of working, squeezing large dollops of paint directly from tube onto the canvas and then working these thick globs of color with a palette knife. The method was costly (a great deal of paint ended up on the studio floor) but Neame and his cinematographer Arthur Ibbetson (whom Neame had promoted from camera operator on this picture) loved the way Bratby's technique imparted a natural depth to the paintings' surfaces that, when lit at a three-quarter angle, gave a strength, intensity, and texture to the work that could never have been achieved by a brush. Guinness often visited Bratby when he was working, observing his movements and moods (the real-life artist was frequently as roguish and contrary as the on-screen painter). When Bratby's wife saw the movie, she was able to pick out the visual bits that the actor had keenly lifted from his model. Although Guinness regarded The Horse's Mouth as one of his finest works, its reception among British critics was only lukewarm. Some carped at its failure to fully capture Cary's novel, while others found the lead performance self-indulgent and gimmicky. But it was well-regarded enough within the country's film industry to earn Guinness a British Academy Award nomination for his screenplay and another for Kay Walsh's supporting performance as his loyal girlfriend. The Horse's Mouth was much better received outside of England. Walsh won the US National Board of Review award for Best Supporting Actress, and Guinness received Best Actor awards in festivals at Venice and Barcelona. The picture was also a hit in the Soviet Union, where it was popular for its depiction of an artist in conflict with capitalist society. The Horse's Mouth was even selected for a Royal Premiere charity screening in the presence of Queen Elizabeth II and the Queen Mother at the Empire Leicester Square theater in February 1959. An interesting note about this film's exhibition in the U.S.: When it played at the Paris cinema in New York, the opening short was the first film by noted documentarian D.A. Pennebaker, who later created such films as the Bob Dylan documentary Don't Look Back (1967) and The War Room (1993) about Bill Clinton's 1992 presidential campaign. The theater's manager originally offered to buy Pennebaker's impressionistic piece about the soon-to-be-demolished Third Avenue El train for $100, telling the artist that was a far better deal than just renting it for the short period that foreign films usually played at the Paris. Instead, the director opted for a $25 per week rental rate, which turned out to be more lucrative when The Horse's Mouth proved to be a big hit with Manhattan audiences and was held over for many weeks. Pennebaker's short is now included in the Criterion Collection DVD release of the Guinness picture. Director: Ronald Neame Producers: Albert Fennell, John Bryan, Ronald Neame Screenplay: Alec Guinness, based on the novel by Joyce Cary Cinematography: Arthur Ibbetson Editing: Anne V. Coates Art Direction: William C. Andrews Paintings by John Bratby Cast: Alec Guinness (Gulley Jimson), Kay Walsh (Coker), Renee Houston (Sara), Mike Morgan (Nosey), Robert Coote (Sir William Beeder). C-97m. by Rob Nixon

Quotes

Trivia

Mike Morgan died 10 days before the end of shooting he had to be dubbed by an unknown actor in post production

Notes

The screenplay, written by star Alec Guinness, was nominated for an Academy Award. The Horse's Mouth was the only screenplay written by Alec Guinness. The picture was shot on location in London and was financed by United Artists and their distribution partner in the film, Lopert Films.

Miscellaneous Notes

Voted Best Foreign Film and Best Supporting Actress (Walsh) by the 1958 National Board of Review.

Voted One of the Ten Best Films of the Year by the 1958 New York Times Film Critics.

Winner of the Best Actor Award (Guiness) at the 1958 Venice Film Festival.

Released in United States 1958

Released in United States on Video August 31, 1988

Released in United States September 1958

Re-released in United States on Video April 27, 1994

Premiered at Venice Film Festival September, 1958.

Formerly distributed on video by Nelson Entertainment.

Released in United States 1958

Re-released in United States on Video April 27, 1994

Released in United States on Video August 31, 1988

Released in United States September 1958 (Premiered at Venice Film Festival September, 1958.)