OMDB
Home Movies Series Search
OMDB

Built by Torkel Aannestad with Next.js Next.js and shadcn/ui shadcn/ui.

Data provided by TMDB.

GitHubSource code
The River
The River

The River (1951)

72% User Rating
1h 39min
Drama
Romance

"Beauty... Mystery... Delightful Humor..."

Director Jean Renoir’s entrancing first color feature—shot entirely on location in India—is a visual tour de force. Based on the novel by Rumer Godden, the film eloquently contrasts the growing pains of three young women with the immutability of the Bengal river around which their daily lives unfold. Enriched by Renoir’s subtle understanding and appreciation for India and its people, The River gracefully explores the fragile connections between transitory emotions and everlasting creation.

Jean RenoirDirector

Cast

View Cast & Crew
Nora Swinburne

Nora Swinburne

The Mother

Esmond Knight

Esmond Knight

The Father

Arthur Shields

Arthur Shields

Mr. John

Suprova Mukerjee

Suprova Mukerjee

Nan

The Movie Database

Thomas E. Breen

Capt. John

The Movie Database

Patricia Walters

Harriet

Radha Burnier

Radha Burnier

Melanie

Adrienne Corri

Adrienne Corri

Valerie

June Tripp

June Tripp

Narrator (voice)

The Movie Database

Nimai Barik

Kanu (uncredited)

The Movie Database

Richard R. Foster

Bogey (uncredited)

The Movie Database

Jane Harris

Muffie (uncredited)

The Movie Database

Jennifer Harris

Mouse (uncredited)

The Movie Database

Trilak Jetley

Anil (uncredited)

Bhogwan Singh

Bhogwan Singh

Sajjan (uncredited)

The Movie Database

Penelope Wilkinson

Elizabeth (uncredited)

The Movie Database

Cecilia Wood

Victoria (uncredited)

Reviews (1)

All Reviews
CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
Rating 70%

February 8, 2024

I found there to be something of the beauty of one of novelist Rumor Godden's other novels - "Black Narcussus" (1947) in this gorgeously photographed tale of three young women growing up with the Ganges river providing a constant in their lives. Our story is narrated, in part, by "Harriet" (Patricia Walters) who lives an affluent life beside the river with her much younger sisters, brother and with her mother (Nora Swinburne) expecting number seven! The age difference means she spends much of her time with her two friends "Valerie" (Andrienne Corri) and "Melanie" (Radha). "Melanie" is of mixed-race, her father being being British, her late mother a local - and so their's is a more complex dynamic fitting in with a society that was still pretty unforgiving of inter-racial transgressions. The three girls rub along well enough though, enjoying the simplicities of their privileged lives, until the arrival of the handsome "Uncle John" (Thomas E. Breen) who is the cousin of "Mr. John" (Arthur Shields) - the dad of "Melanie". This visitor has, quite literally, been through the wars and has a prosthetic limb to show for it. Psychologically struggling, he has come to hide himself away; to remove any reminders of his former more able existence. What he doesn't bargain for though are these three girls. They take an immediate shine to him and over the course of the latter part of the film we enjoy their growing infatuation and rivalries - all set amidst the colourful and vibrant Hindu community in which they live but with which they have remarkably little but the most polite of involvement. As you'd expect, the narrative delivers an occasional tragedy and it takes a perhaps little too stoic a view on the value of human life - especially when it isn't white - but for the most part the story seems set on avoiding anything politically, or even societally contentious as the plot develops. Essentially, there's not a great deal of actual substance to this story. It's a beautifully photographed and aesthetically pleasing depiction of a dream, if you like - and it's not a great dream for everyone; even "Harriet" - before the timeless Ganges continues on it's way past farms, fields, temples and homes. It looks great on a big screen and if you can, literally, go with the flow then you ought to be able to appreciate it for what it was, when it was written in 1946.

Media

View All Media
The River (1951) Original Trailer [HD]

The River (1951) Original Trailer [HD]

Martin Scorsese on THE RIVER

Martin Scorsese on THE RIVER

Recommended

View All Recommended
Lessons of Darkness
The Turin Horse
The Headless Woman
Apur Sansar
A Touch of Sin
The Golden Coach
The Seventh Company Outdoors
The Brute
Rain
Knife in the Clear Water
By the Time It Gets Dark
The Wages of Fear
Les Misérables
Paprika
The Revenge of Frankenstein
Barbie
Monkey Business
Mystery Train
Studio 666
Promising Young Woman