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Howards End

Howards End

  • Status: Released
  • 13-03-1992
  • Runtime: 142 min
  • Score: 7
  • Vote count: 539

A saga of class relations and changing times in an Edwardian England on the brink of modernity, the film centers on liberal Margaret Schlegel, who, along with her sister Helen, becomes involved with two couples: wealthy, conservative industrialist Henry Wilcox and his wife Ruth, and the downwardly mobile working-class Leonard Bast and his mistress Jackie.

Emma Thompson

Margaret Schlegel

Helena Bonham Carter

Helen Schlegel

Anthony Hopkins

Henry J. Wilcox

Samuel West

Leonard Bast

Vanessa Redgrave

Ruth Wilcox

Adrian Ross Magenty

Tibby Schlegel

Prunella Scales

Aunt Juley

James Wilby

Charles Wilcox

Joseph Bennett

Paul Wilcox

Jo Kendall

Annie

Jemma Redgrave

Evie Wilcox

Crispin Bonham-Carter

Albert Fussell

Ian Latimer

Station Master

Siegbert Prawer

Man Asking a Question

Susie Lindeman

Dolly Wilcox

Nicola Duffett

Jacky Bast

Mark Tandy

Luncheon Guests

Andrew St. Clair

Luncheon Guests

Anne Lambton

Luncheon Guests

Emma Godfrey

Luncheon Guests

Duncan Brown

Luncheon Guests

Iain Kelly

Luncheon Guests

Atalanta White

Maid at Howards End

Gerald Paris

Porphyrion Supervisor

Allie Byrne

Blue-stockings

Sally Geoghegan

Blue-stockings

Paula Stockbridge

Blue-stockings

Bridget Duvall

Blue-stockings

Lucy Freeman

Blue-stockings

Harriet Stewart

Blue-stockings

Tina Leslie

Blue-stockings

Mark Payton

Percy Cahill

Delaney Davidson

Simpson's Carver

Mary McWilliams

Wilcox Baby

Barbara Hicks

Miss Avery

Rodney Rymell

Chauffeur

Luke Parry

Tom, the Farmer's Boy

Antony Gilding

Bank Supervisor

Peter Cellier

Colonel Fussell

Patricia Lawrence

Wedding Guests

Margery Mason

Wedding Guests

Jim Bowden

Martlett

Alan James

Porphyrion Chief Clerk

Jocelyn Cobb

Telegraph Operator

Peter Darling

Doctor

Terence Sach

Delivery Man

Brian Lipson

Police Inspector

Mary Nash

Pianist

Barr Heckstall-Smith

Helen's Child

Simon Callow

Music and Meaning Lecturer (uncredited)

badelf

The script itself is not up the level of Remains of the Day, but then E.M.Forster is not Ishiguro (Never Let Me Go). Nevertheless E.M.Forster gives us a huge, complex story that holds our interest for the entire 142 minutes. And the Ivory-Merchant team contributes a beautiful setpiece, complete with perfect cinematography, locations, costumes and a team of the finest actors in Britain. And two of the Redgrave family to play mother and daughter. The acting from everyone on screen is phenomenal!

CinemaSerf

I think this might be the pinnacle of the Merchant Ivory storytelling world (with thanks to E.M. Forster), as a strong ensemble cast assembles to tell a tale of Edwardian Britain that brings into stark focus a class system that is just beginning to show some cracks. "Wilcox" (Anthony Hopkins) is what I suppose you'd call nouveau riche. A millionaire industrialist who has acquired quite a few grand country properties from the increasingly impoverished aristocracy. When his first wife (Vanessa Redgrave) dies at the eponymous country cottage, she has apparently promised it to her friend "Margaret" (Emma Thompson) but the family choose to disregard the bequeathing letter and she is none the wiser. Meantime, her well meaning and quite fussy sister "Helen" (Helena Bonham-Carter) has become aware of the hard working clerk "Bast" (Samuel West) who is married, sympathetically but rather unlovingly, to "Jacky" (Nicola Duffett) and not without ambition. "Wilcox" is set upon remarrying, and it's "Margaret" who gets the nod. Thing is, though, can there ever be any chance of any real love between them, or indeed for any of them, as the family ghosts - past and present, come back to haunt them and poor "Bast"? It's a grand looking saga this, and it plays the politics of the day well as there are three initially distinct strata of society gradually intermingling, some more willingly than others, throughout the unfolding drama. I actually thought it was the engaging effort from Duffett that stole the show, but Redgrave also contributes well, if briefly, as the ailing "Mrs. Wilcox" and Samuel West also stands out, portraying his character as a decent man who is a fish-out-of water at the best of times, but even more adrift after entrusting himself and his affairs to "Helen". It's a characterful study of human nature that shows up hypocrisy and delivers kindness, showcases nicely all the artifice of the creative talent and is worth a watch.