Representing a rare theatrical effort by prolific
TV writer Earl Hamner, Jr., creator of the wholesome TV series The Waltons (1971-1981), this gentle
family drama concerns four children who struggle to preserve their tenuous
lifestyle in the Great Smokey Mountains after becoming orphans. While the
picture suffers from problems that bedevil many family films, such as contrived
comic-relief sequences and a kid-gloves approach to interpersonal conflict, the
movie benefits from rich atmosphere and unquestionable sincerity. Shot on
location and infused with local color (Carolina schoolchildren served as
extras), the movie builds on strengths including Urs Furrer’s painterly
cinematography and the persuasive rhythms of Hamner’s dialogue. (In voiceover,
the 14-year-old protagonist laments that stress has transformed her into a
“pinched-faced crone,” then observes that “something had flown out of my
brothers and sisters” after a tragedy.) In its best moments, Where the Lilies Bloom—which was based
on a novel by Bill and Vera Cleaver—approaches the sort of poetic Americana that
permeates good country songs. The pleasures of the film are small, to be sure,
but they feel genuine.
When Where the
Lilies Bloom begins, middle-aged widower Roy Luther (Rance Howard) tries to
provide for his four children even though he’s rapidly dying from a respiratory
ailment. Sensing the end is near, Roy Luther entrusts his second-oldest
daughter, Mary Call (Julie Gholson), with taking charge of the family. Roy
Luther’s oldest child, Devola (Jan Smithers), is deemed inappropriate for the
job because she’s a daydreamer and because she has romantic designs on Roy
Luther’s mortal enemy, Kiser Pease (Harry Dean Stanton). A redneck schemer whose
family is closer to middle class than Roy Luther’s dirt-poor clan, Kiser seized
ownership of Roy Luther’s land by paying back taxes. Worse, he wants to marry
the pretty Devola. But since Roy Luther forbids that from happening, Mary Call
feels obligated to block the union even after Roy Luther’s death.
The middle of
the picture, during which the family tries to hide the fact of their father’s
passing from prying neighbors, covers fairly standard family-movie terrain.
Similarly, comedic sequences involving a runaway car and the use of cooked
onions as a cure for pneumonia lose their novelty quickly. Nonetheless,
endearing performances and the dense textures of the location photography offer
ample compensation. Gholson is believably tough and vulnerable, anchoring the
film well, and Stanton makes a strong opposite number as a varmint who slowly
reveals aspects of decency. And if Smithers (who later found fame on WKRP in Cincinnati) doesn’t make much of
an impression, she’s cast effectively for physical type—as are Matthew Burill
and Helen Harmon, who play Mary Call’s other siblings. (Howard, who plays Roy
Luther, is the real-life father of actor-director Ron Howard.) Perhaps the
strongest element of Where the Lilies
Bloom is the heartfelt and unsentimental ending, which complicates the protagonist’s viewpoint
in a meaningful fashion.
Where
the Lilies Bloom: GROOVY
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