God's Own Country

2017

Action / Drama / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Josh O'Connor Photo
Josh O'Connor as Johnny Saxby
Ian Hart Photo
Ian Hart as Martin Saxby
Gemma Jones Photo
Gemma Jones as Deirdre Saxby
John McCrea Photo
John McCrea as University Boy
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
758.21 MB
1280*672
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 44 min
P/S 0 / 3
1.58 GB
1920*1008
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 44 min
P/S 6 / 13

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by CineMuseFilms9 / 10

a brave honest essay on sexual self-discovery

It has been twelve years since the milestone Brokeback Mountain (2005) demanded that cinema be more honest in depicting the realities of same-sex love. Much has changed since then but most tropes of romance are still linked to heterosexuality. Whatever Brokeback achieved in the Wyoming mountains, God's Own Country (2017) takes to another level in the Pennine Hills of Northern England. It is a measure of social progress that cinema has moved beyond just portraits of 'forbidden love' to a space where it can openly explore rather than confront gay love.

Life on a sheep farm is tough and lonely for Johnny (Josh O'Connor). Since his father's stroke, he runs the farm by himself but all he gets is scowling disapproval from his ageing parents. He vents his anger and frustration in drunken binges and rough furtive sex with other gay men in a village wary of anyone who is different. A handsome Romanian seasonal worker Gheorghe (Alec Secareanu) is hired to help during the lambing season and Johnny's rural racism erupts in verbal taunts. Called a gypsy once too often, Gheorghe confronts him with intense physicality and the relationship changes instantly. While tending the sheep, they spend a few nights in an isolated shelter and their first sexual encounter terrifies and confuses Johnny who has never known tenderness and emotional acceptance. Gheorghe's sensitivity compels Johnny to confront his inner fears and discover his emotional self.

This is a complex film on several levels. The story barely moves forward in this cold, lonely, inhospitable place, with the narrative energy coming entirely from its earthy filming style and intense, authentic characterisation. The camera accentuates the slow pace of life by lingering on empty spaces, small details, and nature's ways. A close-up of a butterfly, misty morning light, the birth of a lamb, panoramas of harsh beauty in frosty air, all take on meanings beyond what we see. The depth and nuance of acting by O'Connor and Secareanu is the film's powerhouse. The silences are long and dialogue sparse, and much is communicated through action. Initially there is little to like about Johnny: we cannot get close to someone who is so distant from himself. Gheorghe is the opposite: intuitive, warm, and empathetic. The chemistry between them progresses from turbulence to deep acceptance and each step of the journey is raw and exposed. Intimacy between males is still a frontier in cinema and this film breaks through.

Like Brokeback, this is a genre-defying, coming of age, drama-rich love story. Today's audiences expect realism in human relationship stories and this film offers a full-frontal exploration of masculine sexuality and emotional self-discovery. This is a love story of universal relevance that transcends the usual clichés of romance. It is brave cinema with cutting-edge honesty.

Reviewed by MOscarbradley10 / 10

One of the finest British films of the current century.

Waiting a week to review a film or a play can be problematic. Thinking back, surely the film's faults will rise to the surface, the ones you tended to overlook at the time. Of course, the opposite could be true; mulling over a film in your head might make it grow with hindsight. Walking out of Francis Lee's "God's Own Country" I knew I had seen something special; I knew I had seen a film that was a triumph of both LGBT cinema and of British cinema in general. A week later, and taking everything into account, I'm inclined to think that "God's Own Country" could be the best film of the year.

Like Andrew Haigh's "45 Years" this is an incredibly simple film about very complex emotions and issues. The setting is a farm in Yorkshire. The farm isn't successful and in time, it may well go under. It's run by Martin, (Ian Hart),but he's incapable of working due to injury and later illness. The work, (looking after the sheep and the cattle),is done by his taciturn son Johnny, (Josh O'Connor). Johnny is gay but he's practically homophobic; after a quick bout of sex with a guy he's picked up in a cafe, he just doesn't want to know and brushes the guy off with the words. "We? No." Then Gheorghe comes into his life; he's the Romanian farm-hand they hire, initially for a week, to help with the lambing. At first Johnny treats Gheorghe like dirt, asking him if he's 'a Paki' and calling him 'Gypo' and when, finally, they do have sex it's a rough act of lust borne out of loneliness on both their parts.

It's here that comparisons with "Brokeback Mountain" are bound to be raised, both in the setting and the way in which the initial attraction happens, (there's a later, and quite disarmingly beautiful, moment that will remind you of a similar scene in "Brokeback Mountain"),but Francis Lee's film is a much more honest and a much finer film than Ang Lee's which aimed for a Hollywood demographic.

"God's Own Country" is a film that hearkens back to the great British kitchen-sink movies of the sixties and to the kind of films that Ken Loach is still turning out. It feels 'real' and down-to-earth; at times it could be a documentary, (there are a lot of scenes showing life on a farm where the most dramatic thing that happens is a sheep or a cow giving birth). The relationship at the centre also feels real if, to some, a little unlikely. Perhaps the biggest, indeed the only, fault I can find with "God's Own Country" is in Lee's decision to make Gheorghe the strong, silent hunk who lands on Johnny's lap. Wish-fulfillment or what? Nevertheless, and without wanting to give too much away, it's edifying to finally see a gay-themed movie that doesn't end in tragedy. It's also superbly played by basically its cast of four. Both Josh O'Connor and Alec Secareanu are excellent as Johnny and Gheorghe, conveying so much with very little in the way of dialogue, while Ian Hart and especially Gemma Jones are wonderful as Johnny's father and grandmother. Jones is beautifully understated as a woman who accepts everything life throws at her with stoicism and a degree of humour.

Of course, this is a film that won't appeal to everyone. There are people who will find fault with the pace, with the lack of drama, with its political message and I am sure there will be gay men who will see in Johnny and Gheorghe things they may think don't ring true or simply dislike, (Johnny is far from sympathetic from the outset),and yet it is these very contradictions, together with Lee's wonderful sense of place, that marks this out as a great film in my eyes. And yes, it is deeply political without ever stressing that side of things. This may, indeed, be the first great post-Brexit picture to come out of the UK. However you choose to view it, it remains utterly unmissable.

Reviewed by Sleepin_Dragon9 / 10

Brokeback Mountain, Northern style.

This is such an unexpectedly fantastic movie, very different, very gritty, and intensely passionate. The performances were superb, Josh O'Connor and Alec Secareanu are superb, the pair play off one another incredibly well, creating tension and deep complex feelings, both fantastic. Gemma Jones and Ian Hart, two fantastically talented, established actors are both superb also.

The scenery is just glorious, the title suits the setting perfectly. When you visit Yorkshire, stop, and breathe in the atmosphere you truly are in a spectacular place. Great production values, excellent music, the elements are truly there.

It's very realistic, in terms of lambing, and day to day farm work, the real side of farming life is captured incredibly well.

Excellent, 9/10

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