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Drylanders

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Directed by
  
Don Haldane

Narrated by
  
William Weintraub

Cinematography
  
Reginald H. Morris

Director
  
Don Haldane

Music director
  
Eldon Rathburn

6.5/10
IMDb

Written by
  
M. Charles Cohen

Music by
  
Eldon Rathburn

Initial release
  
April 1963

Budget
  
218,000 USD

Drylanders httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb4

Produced by
  
David Haber-associate producer Peter Jones-producer

Production company
  
National Film Board of Canada

Cast
  
Frances Hyland, Don Francks, William Fruet, James Douglas, Lester Nixon

Similar
  
Waiting for Caroline, Nobody Waved Good‑bye, Who Has Seen the Wind, Loyalties, The Company of Strang

Blood feast 1963 trailer


Drylanders is a 1963 Canadian film directed by Don Haldane from a screenplay by M. Charles Cohen. It was the National Film Board of Canada’s first English-language feature film.

Contents

Synopsis

Drylanders is set in Canada at the turn of the century. Daniel Greer (James Douglas) returns home after the Boer War to find city life not to his liking. Instead, he opts for the life of a wheat farmer. At first, his farm is prosperous, but he becomes victim to a nationwide drought. He struggles to keep his farm afloat, but dies before he could see the end of the drought. His wife (Frances Hyland) continues her husband's work on the farm.

Production

Drylanders was a fictionalized documentary similar to earlier French-language productions from the NFB's Panoramique series and dramas in the English-language Perspective series. Heavily promoted during its release, the film was modestly successful at the box office.

Drylanders came about after a documentary on farming and irrigation in Saskatchewan, suggested by writer Charles Cohen, had been rejected by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Director Donald Haldane then suggested making a fiction film. Cohen wrote a personal story, concentrating on the trials of the "Greer" family, who had come from Montreal to try their luck at farming.

The film was filmed in black and white, in SuperScope: a less expensive alternative to CinemaScope. It was the first time SuperScope had been used at the NFB. Filming began in the summer of 1961, shooting in and around Swift Current, Saskatchewan. Several stage actors from Toronto were brought in for the principal roles, including Hyland and Douglas. Local actors were signed for some of the smaller supporting roles. Filming on the Prairies took several weeks. A key blizzard scene was shot in winter of 1962 at the NFB studio in Montreal. The production budget rose to about $218,000, roughly twice what was planned.

Release

Columbia Pictures distributed the film, premiering Drylanders in Swift Current, then releasing across the Prairies, a couple of towns at a time. The film was also released in British Columbia and Eastern Canada, eventually playing in more than 500 cinemas nationwide.

The film was offered as part of a double feature or accompanied by the NFB documentary Fields of Sacrifice. A French-language version, Un autre pays, played across Quebec. The film was released theatrically in the United Kingdom, United States and Central and South America. It would also play on television in Switzerland, Yugoslavia, China and Malaysia, among other countries.

It played theatrically throughout 1963 and 1964 before making its way to the non-theatrical circuit, where it was shown in schools and community centres on 16 mm. It later enjoyed a second career on television and home video.

Cast

Frances Hyland as Liza
James B. Douglas as Daniel Greer
Lester Nixon as Bob McPherson
Mary Savage as Ada McPherson
William Fruet as Colin (as William Fruete)
Don Francks as Russel
Iréna Mayeska as Thora
William Weintraub as Narrator (voice)

References

Drylanders Wikipedia