Men_of_Two_Worlds

<i>Men of Two Worlds</i>

Men of Two Worlds

1946 British film


Men of Two Worlds is a 1946 British Technicolor drama film directed by Thorold Dickinson and starring Phyllis Calvert, Eric Portman and Robert Adams. The screenplay concerns an African music student who returns home to battle a witch doctor for control over his tribe.[4]

Quick Facts Men of Two Worlds, Directed by ...

The film was released in the United States as Kisenga, Man of Africa.

Plot

Kisenga is a composer and pianist from Marashi in Tanganyika who has spent fifteen years in London. He decides to return to his homeland to help the District Commissioner, Randall, in the work of health care.

Randall explains that an outbreak of sleeping sickness caused by the tsetse fly is moving across Tanganyika and has almost reached Marashi. He wants to transfer the population of 25,000 to a new settlement on higher ground and set fire to the bush to destroy the tsetse fly. Randall is helped by Dr Munro.

Kisenga arrives at Marashi. His sister Saburi is engaged to a young man named Ali, an assistant at the dispensary. Kisenga meets the Chief Rafuf, who is under the control of Margoli, a witch doctor. Rafuf does not want to move.

Kisenga decides to settle in his old home and teaches music. The tsetse fly gets closer to the village and Doctor Burton wants to do blood tests on villagers, which are opposed by Margoli.

Margoli fights the doctors and Kisenga's father dies of malaria. Margoli casts spells against Kisenga. He falls ill but recovers when the children perform Kisenga's music. The clearing of the village begins and the people leave for their new settlement.

Cast

  • Phyllis Calvert - Doctor Catherine Munro
  • Eric Portman - District Commissioner Randall
  • Robert Adams - Kisenga
  • Orlando Martins - Magole
  • Arnold Marlé - Professor Collner
  • Cathleen Nesbitt - Mrs. Upjohn
  • Lucius Blake - Rafi the Chief[5] (billed as Sam Blake)
  • Napoleon Florent - Kisenga's Father
  • Viola Thompson - Kisenga's Mother
  • Eseza Makumbi - Saburi his Sister
  • Tunji Williams - Ali the Dispenser
  • Rudolph Evans - Abram the Schoolmaster
  • Uriel Porter - Saidi the Headman
  • Cecily Dale - Sala his Wife
  • Prince Zulamkah - Chief's Messenger
  • James Rich - Office Clerk
  • George Coop - Conductor of Orchestra
  • David Horne - Concert Agent
  • Cyril Raymond - Education Officer

Production

Development

The film was written by Joyce Cary who had worked in Africa as a civil servant. He and Dickinson drafted a treatment then in January 1943 they travelled from England to Tanganika, doing a first draft of the script. As soon as they arrived Dickinson fell ill with malaria.

Thorold Dickinson said: "Our picture categorically insists that witchcraft does exist; that it is suggestion, supported by all the trappings of religion, and can only be defeated by counter-suggestion. It's a struggle of mind against mind. There is a terrific blood motive running through the story. Blood drips in color. The East Africans believe that blood is the life. Blood gives power. This primitive thing – this bloodlust – is really pure fascism and has got to be killed."[6]

Esther Makumbi was the one lead actor from Africa – the rest were based in Britain. Robert Adams came to England to study law and moved into acting.[6][7]

Shooting

Filming began in 1943, with eight months shooting in Tanganyika. A U-boat sank cameras and stock on the way out. Cameras were impounded and shooting was held up with slow convoys, bad weather, a strike of lab men in Hollywood and difficulties involved in shooting in Technicolor.[8]

Filming in Tanganyika cost an estimated £600,000. The film had to be re-done in England.[2] The replica of the concert hall built at Denham Film Studios was one of the largest sets ever built in England.[9]

Filming in England started in January 1945.

The film was part of a series of movies which cost £3 million, aimed at beating Hollywood head on. The others were London Town (£700,000), Henry V (£450,000) and Caesar and Cleopatra (£1,300,000).[10]

Music

Muir Mathieson, head of music at Denham, commissioned Arthur Bliss to compose the score. Bliss combined his own style with ethnically derived material - he used some authentic recordings of East African music to help with this. The African influence is also evident from the use of a male chorus in the score. The film opens with a performance of Kisenga's Piano Concerto - an example of what Steve Race named "Denham Concertos" - which was performed on the soundtrack by pianist Eileen Joyce.[11] It was extracted as a concert piece, Baraza (1946), and recorded in the same year on a Decca 78, with Mathieson conducting Joyce and the National Symphony Orchestra. Bliss liked the music, and described director Thorold Dickinson as "one of the nicest people (I'd) ever come across to work with".[12]

Release

The film had its world premiere at Avalon Cinema in Dar es Salaam on 16 July 1946. It then had its London premiere in front of the King and Queen.[13]

Box office

According to trade papers, the film was a "notable box office attraction" at British cinemas.[14]

According to one report, it was the 17th most popular film at the British box office in 1946 after The Wicked Lady, The Bells of St. Mary's, Piccadilly Incident, The Captive Heart, Road to Utopia, Caravan, Anchors Away, The Corn is Green, Gilda, The House on 92nd Street, The Overlanders, Appointment with Crime, The Bandit of Sherwood Forest, Kitty, Spellbound, and Scarlet Street.[15]

Kinematograph Weekly reported that the 'biggest winner' at the box office in 1946 Britain was The Wicked Lady, with "runners up" being The Bells of St Marys, Piccadilly Incident, The Road to Utopia, Tomorrow is Forever, Brief Encounter, Wonder Man, Anchors Away, Kitty, The Captive Heart, The Corn is Green, Spanish Main, Leave Her to Heaven, Gilda, Caravan, Mildred Pierce, Blue Dahlia, Years Between, O.S.S., Spellbound, Courage of Lassie, My Reputation, London Town, Caesar and Cleopatra, Meet the Navy, Men of Two Worlds, Theirs is the Glory, The Overlanders, and Bedelia.[16] The film however unlikely recouped its enormous cost.

US release

The film had trouble being seen in the US due to censor concerns over its depiction of black people.[17] It was not released in the US until 1952.

Reputation today

BFI Screenonline later said the film was "a creditable effort to tell an African story from the point of view of an African. The story only makes sense if we identify with Kisenga's dilemmas. Only he can resolve a situation in which the African and the European world views are at loggerheads, and he is prepared to give up his life in the struggle. The film gives us unusually authentic-seeming pictures of village life and ritual, and invests the people with a certain dignity and sensibility, even if ultimately they prefer superstition and fear to science. The photography is slow-moving and beautifully composed; African faces appear on screen distinct with emotion and individuality."[18]

Martin Scorsese, an admirer of Dickinson, later said: "He didn't make many films, but each is a fascinating project. Even when the movie doesn't work, like Men of Two Worlds or The Prime Minister, you're struck by the choice of subject matter, by the vivacity of the film-making, the intelligence of the approach."[19]

Dickinson and Carey travelled to India in January 1946 to research a film to be made there.[20]


References

  1. Clare, John (15 February 1947). "New Super-Films Cost Too Much". Times Pictorial. Dublin, Ireland. p. 5. ProQuest 529247534.
  2. "Noteworthy Films Made In U.K." The West Australian. Perth. 17 January 1953. p. 27. Retrieved 4 August 2012 via National Library of Australia.
  3. Geoffrey Macnab, J. Arthur Rank and the British Film Industry, London, Routledge (1993) p191
  4. "Men of Two Worlds (1946)". Archived from the original on 13 January 2009.
  5. Khomami, Nadia (2 October 2023). "Overlooked black actor may have been most prolific in early British cinema". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2 October 2023.
  6. C.A. LEJEUNE LONDON, Nov. 1 (By Mail). (19 November 1944). "QUIET FILM DAYS IN LONDON". New York Times.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. "East African pin-up girl goes western". The Sun. No. 2213. Sydney. 9 September 1945. p. 3. Retrieved 9 August 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  8. "Men of Two Worlds". Variety. 24 July 1946. p. 14.
  9. "Studio Gossip About Films And Actors". The Mercury. Vol. CLXII, no. 23, 404. Tasmania. 8 December 1945. p. 9. Retrieved 9 August 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  10. "BRITAIN REVISITED—XII. ENGLISH FILMES ARE ACTIVE". The Argus. No. 30, 911. Melbourne. 25 September 1945. p. 2. Retrieved 9 August 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  11. "CENTRAL AFRICA HAS FIRST FILM PREMIERE". New York Times. 17 July 1946. ProQuest 107708906.
  12. Robert Murphy, Realism and Tinsel: Cinema and Society in Britain 1939–48 2003 p209, via Google Books
  13. "Hollywood Sneaks In 15 Films on '25 Best' List of Arty Britain". The Washington Post. 15 January 1947. p. 2.
  14. Lant, Antonia (1991). Blackout: reinventing women for wartime British cinema. Princeton University Press. p. 232.
  15. "New York Diary". The Advertiser. Adelaide. 13 December 1946. p. 12. Retrieved 9 August 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  16. Men of Two Worlds at BFI Screenonline
  17. "Moving at the speed of emotion": Martin Scorsese on Thorold Dickinson Horne, Philip. Sight and Sound; London Vol. 13, Iss. 11, (Nov 2003): 24-26,3.
  18. "British Film Team Surveys India: 12-WEEK STUDY TOUR". The Times of India. 12 February 1946. p. 4. ProQuest 499923635.

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