The Shout
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Jerzy Skolimowski
Alan Bates
Susannah York
John Hurt
Tim Curry
John Rees
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
A traveller by the name of Crossley, forces himself upon a musician and his wife in a lonely part of Devon, and uses the aboriginal magic he has learned to displace his host.
Director
Jerzy Skolimowski
Cast
Alan Bates
Susannah York
John Hurt
Tim Curry
John Rees
Robert Stephens
Colin Higgins
Julian Hough
Susan Woolridge
Nick Stringer
Jim Broadbent
Carol Drinkwater
Crew
Michael Austin
Michael Austin
Tony Banks
Alan Bell
William Diver
David Farrell
Betty Glasow
Kip Gowans
Robert Graves
Bob Hedges
Joyce Herlihy
Rupert Hine
Simon Holland
Tony Jackson
Sara Jolly
Tim Jordon
John Levenberger
Gordon K. Mccallum
Michael Molloy
Jane Moscrop
David Paddon
Keith Pain
Patsy Pollack
Mike Rutherford
Michael Saxton
Wally Schneiderman
Arnold Schulkes
Mary Selway
Ann Skinner
Jerzy Skolimowski
Jeremy Thomas
Barrie Vince
Peter Waller
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
The Shout
Much ado was made about the complex and striking Dolby sound mix of The Shout prior to its release and, for those lucky enough to see it in a movie theatre, it was a marvel of aural distortion and separation, particularly in those sequences where Anthony, a composer of electronic music, was experimenting in his studio. The real showstopper though was Crossley's deafening shout which has the power to kill and does so, striking down a farmer and his entire flock of sheep in one disturbing sequence.
The Shout was the eighth feature film for Polish director Skolimowski, who became an international film festival favorite after Rysopis (aka Identification Marks: None), his debut feature in 1964 (he had previously directed several short films). In addition to Rysopis, Walkover (1965), Barrier (1966) and Le depart (1967) are considered key early achievements but his later work, when he dabbled in international productions such as The Adventures of Gerard (1970) and King, Queen, Knave (1972), an adaptation of the Vladimir Nabokov novel starring David Niven, Gina Lollobrigida and John Moulder-Brown, has been more erratic. There were a few extraordinary exceptions, however, such as Deep End (1971), an inspired coming-of-age tale which combined quirky black humor with obsessive sexual longing; it was poorly distributed by Paramount and overlooked at the time, though it is now considered one of Skolimowski's most personal and innovative films.
After more than a decade of middling success and commercial failures, the director surprised everyone with The Shout; it won the Grand Prize of the Jury at Cannes and was his biggest critical success since le depart eleven years earlier. An independent film, distributed by The Rank Organization, The Shout was distinguished by an intelligent, literate script by Skolimowski and Michael Austin, which at times exudes the sinister atmosphere of a Harold Pinter play (The Birthday Party, The Servant). It also sports an avant-garde music score composed by Tony Banks and Mike Rutherford (two members of the rock group Genesis), stunning cinematography by Mike Molloy (Scandal [1989], The Hit [1984]) and an impeccable cast headed by Alan Bates, who is appropriately intense and menacing as Crossley. Cast in the role of the bewitched Rachel, Susannah York was already an internationally acclaimed actress for her work in such films as They Shoot Horses, Don't They? [1969] and Images [1972] but John Hurt as her baffled, rational-minded husband was just beginning to emerge as a major film actor which would be confirmed by the end of the decade in such films as Midnight Express [1978], Alien [1979] and The Elephant Man [1980]. Tim Curry, trying to broaden his range after being stereotyped by fans as Dr. Frank-N-Furter from The Rocky Horror Picture Show [1975], and Robert Stephens make the most of their small roles and, if you watch closely, you'll notice Jim Broadbent in the cricket match scenes as an inmate who goes bonkers during the lightning storm at the climax; it was his first film appearance.
When The Shout was released in the U.S., it was admired by many critics and dismissed by others as pretentious. Vincent Canby of The New York Times called the film "a vivid, piercingly loud movie as well as an almost totally incoherent one...it becomes so full of loose ends, contradictions, cryptic symbols and close-ups of objects that, at the moment, have no meaning, that one eventually tunes out of the narrative..." He did, however, find things to praise: "Charles, played by Mr. Bates with the great looney relish he brings to such roles, is brilliant." He also noted that it "is an elegant looking movie, nicely performed." More positive notices were posted by Variety which called it "gripping" and Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times who wrote "What makes the movie terrifying is the way in which the outback magic is introduced so naturally into the placid fabric of village life."
The Shout had a brief run on the arthouse circuit in the U.S. and then disappeared but its reputation has improved considerably since that time thanks to repertory screenings and reappraisals by film scholars. Skolimowski, who also occasionally works as an actor in such films as Volker Schlondorff's Circle of Deceit [1981] and Julian Schnabel's Before Night Falls [2000], has enjoyed other critical successes since The Shout as represented by Moonlighting [1982] starring Jeremy Irons, Success Is the Best Revenge [1984] with Michael York, Anouk Aimee and John Hurt, and Cztery noce z Anna [English title, Four Nights with Anna, 2008], which won the special jury prize at the Tokyo International Film Festival and garnered three awards at the Polish Film Festival.
Producer: Jeremy Thomas
Director: Jerzy Skolimowski
Screenplay: Michael Austin, Jerzy Skolimowski; Robert Graves (story)
Cinematography: Mike Molloy
Art Direction: Simon Holland
Music: Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford
Film Editing: Barrie Vince
Cast: Alan Bates (Crossley), Susannah York (Rachel Fielding), John Hurt (Anthony Fielding), Robert Stephens (Medical Man), Tim Curry (Robert Graves), Julian Hough (Vicar), Carol Drinkwater (Wife), John Rees (Inspector), Jim Broadbent (Fielder in cowpat), Susan Wooldridge (Harriet), Nick Stringer (Cobbler).
C-86m. Letterboxed.
by Jeff Stafford
The Shout
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1978
Released in United States 1979
Released in United States March 1979
Shown at New York Film Festival September-October 1978.
Released in United States 1978 (Shown at New York Film Festival September-October 1978.)
Released in United States 1979
Released in United States March 1979 (Shown at FILMEX: Los Angeles International Film Exposition (Contemporary Cinema) March 14-30, 1979.)