Con Wainwright (Ben Chaplin) struggles with his brother Jedd (James Purefoy).

Feast of July
1995/U.K., 119 Minutes

Merchant Ivory's production deal with Disney also envisioned Merchant Ivory films directed and scripted by people other than Ivory and Jhabvala; the first of these was Feast of July, produced by Merchant on an $8 million budget and released by Disney's Buena Vista/Touchstone Pictures in 1995. It is taken from the 1954 novel by H.E. Bates, one of England's most prolific modern writers and a novelist often compared to Thomas Hardy and D.H. Lawrence. Like many other Bates novels, Feast of July is set in the turn-of-the-century English Midlands, a rural region that by then had become industrialized. It is an austere, foreboding novel that has now, with a faithful screenplay by Christopher Neame and skillful direction by Christopher Menaul, become an austere, foreboding film. The picture begins with a young woman, Bella Ford (Embeth Davidtz) struggling alone across the windy high country and giving birth to a stillborn baby in a deserted cabin. She has been seduced and abandoned by a young man, a moral lightweight named Arch Wilson, and as the story opens had been in search of the town where Wilson told her he lived.

Director: Christopher Menaul
Producers: Henry Herbert, Christopher Neame
Screenplay: Christoper Neame, based on the novel by H. E. Bates
Director of photography: Peter Sova
Music: Zbigniew Preisner
Editor: Chris Wimble
Production design: Christopher Robilliard
Costume designer: Phoebe DeGaye
Executive Producer: Ismail Mechant, Paul Bradley
Casting director: Kathleen Mackie

Cast: Embeth Davidtz (Bella Ford), Ben Chaplin (Con Wainwright), Tom Bell (Ben Wainwright), Gemma Jones (Mrs. Wainwright), James Purefoy (Jedd Wainwright), Greg Wise (Arch Wilson), Kenneth Anderson (Matty Wainwright).



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