Anyone who disagrees with the assertion that My Darling Clementine and The Searchers are just about the best films ever made is banned for life from this site with immediate effect. Nonetheless John Ford made his share of turkeys. Exhibit number one is his version of Sean O’Casey’s The Plough and the Stars in which the Easter Rising is made into a romantic melodrama.

Still it’s not without interest. In was made just twenty years after the event and James Connolly is portrayed sympathetically. Outside Ireland Connolly’s Marxism  would have been unknown to most of the audience but it defies belief that Ford was not aware of where Connolly stood ideologically.

This badly edited little compilation show the Citizen’s Army led by Constance Markievicz marching to hear Connolly speak; an exchange in which a British soldier is told that “the only duty of a socialist is the emancipation of the working class; Connolly’s execution and a passionate defence of irregular warfare against superior forces.

It’s an interesting curio and while Ford didn’t always have a firm grasp of the difference between oppressed and oppressor in some of his films he leaves no doubt about which side he’s on in this one.

7 responses to “James Connolly and John Ford”

  1. Much can be forgiven a fan of Ford.

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  2. Never seen this one but it’d be interesting to look in up in Tag Gallagher’s excellent book on ford, i got it out the library a while back and thought that it as a really strong defence of ford against those who portray his work as reactionary (not that that would automatically damn it) which happily isnt true

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  3. The Informer in ’35 and The Plough and the Stars in ’36.

    Sounds like Ford was on a plastic paddy binge at the time.

    I’m still looking out for that film with Peter Mullan as Connolly that’s been in the pipeline for years now.

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  4. Several scenes of The Plough and the Stars were reshot without Ford’s consent or cooperation, apparently in an effort to downplay the politics. The Informer was far more successful at the time but it hasn’t aged too well.

    Ernie O’Malley served as a consultant/technical advisor, whatever that meant, on The Quiet Man and another curio of Fordian Irishry, The Rising of the Moon.

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  5. […] James Connolly and John Ford. […]

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