A peculiar hybrid of downbeat character study and
upbeat romance, The Ragman’s Daughter tells the story of a British thief
looking back on his younger years, which are depicted through extended
flashbacks of his doomed affair with a beautiful girl from a higher social
station. The story moves in peculiar rhythms, because very often when it seems
as if the narrative is about to go down a dark road, tension gets diffused; the
idea, presumably, was to capture the excitement that the thief and his girl
felt when living in close proximity to danger, but the end result is that much
of the picture’s running time comprises scenes without impact. (For instance,
the lead characters do things like break into houses and stores, but their actions have few lasting repercussions.) Yet The
Ragman’s Daughter isn’t as dull an experience as this description might
suggest. First-time director Harold Becker, who later made such fine films as The
Onion Field (1979), orchestrates visuals beautifully, arranging the equivalent
of elegant still photographs to accentuate the gritty locations used for the
production—Becker’s imagery lends such rich atmosphere that narrative turns
feel less trite than they might have otherwise.
Additionally, leading man Simon
Rouse, who plays the thief as a young man, has a naturalistic style distinguished
by jittery physicality. With his scraggly mop of long hair and his wiry build,
he’s quite believable as a street punk who can’t believe his luck when he hooks
up with a glamorous upper-crust beauty. Playing the girl is Victoria Tennant,
who later achieved notoriety as Steve Martin’s on- and offscreen partner in the
’80s and ’90s. Although she doesn’t particularly wow in this, her debut
performance, she’s so physically right for her role that her look conveys a
great deal of meaning. Long and lean, with silky bands of bright blonde hair
framing model-pretty features, Tennant epitomizes an unattainable ideal that could
make any young man’s blood boil.
Perhaps the most interesting question
permeating the story is that of whether Tennant’s character genuinely loves her
paramour or is merely toying with him for a lark. Alas, this rich vein is not
sufficiently explored. Similarly, the dramatic conflict suggested by the
movie’s title—how far a wealthy man will go to separate his little girl from an
unworthy suitor—fails to generate much heat until the very end of the story.
The biggest missed opportunity, though, involves the framing device. Although
Patrick O’Connell has a strong lived-in quality as the middle-aged thief lost
in memories of happier times, the revelation the movie delivers once the past
and present storylines intersect is so disappointing and understated that it’s
not much of a reward for watching the entire movie.
The
Ragman’s Daughter: FUNKY
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