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July 31, 2013 THE VILLADOM TIMES
II • Page 19
‘Lord of the Flies’ depicts the original ‘lost boys’
by Dennis Seuling
“Lord of the Flies” (The Criterion Col-
lection) is Peter Brook’s adaptation of the
William Golding novel, a staple of high
school English classes. The film is the
first of two big-screen versions, this one in
black and white. A color version was made
in 1990, but the Brook version is defini-
tive. A plane crashes near a deserted island
and all the adults die. A group of English
schoolboys, ages 10 to 12, survive and
hope to be rescued. They establish a make-
shift but initially workable government
that soon degenerates into anarchy. Tribal
strife occurs based on class differences
and a power play ensues as the boys evolve
from decent kids to savage survivalists.
Director Brook strived for a documen-
tary look and selected for his cast mostly
British boys who had grown up with
structure, parental guidance, and societal
law to reflect the characters in Golding’s
novel. On location without parents, the
boys loosened up. A lot of the action was
improvised. The film metaphorically illustrates
what happens when civilization breaks
down and man’s true nature is revealed.
Because the boys are stranded in a tropi-
cal paradise, they have plenty to eat, fresh
water, and a temperate climate, so the dis-
Piggy (Hugh Edwards) and Ralph (James Aubrey) are among a group of schoolboys stranded
on a tropical island in ‘Lord of the Flies.’
solution of morality is planted squarely
on human flaws and frailty and the lack
of moral leadership rather than solely on
environment. The Blu-ray edition contains audio
commentary by Brook, audio recordings
of Golding reading from his novel, a 2008
interview with Brook, never-before-seen
footage, and a booklet featuring a critical
essay. “The Bronte Sisters” (Cohen Media
Group) is a bio-drama nominated for the
top prize, the Palme d’Or, at the 1979
Cannes Film Festival. Director and co-
writer Andre Techine achieves an authen-
tic depiction of the bleak, lonely existence
of the Victorian-era Bronte sisters, Emily
(Isabelle Adjani), Charlotte (Marie-France
Pisier), and Anne (Isabelle Huppert). The
young women live in a Yorkshire village
under the stern eye of their minister father
(Patrick Magee, “A Clockwork Orange”),
and also must deal with their troubled,
opium-addicted brother, Bramwell (Pascal
Gregory). While all four siblings have artis-
tic ambitions, their dreams are thwarted by
romantic disappointments and tragic ill-
ness. However, against all obstacles and
using pseudonyms, the sisters publish their
poetry and novels.
Through beautiful cinematography
and highly atmospheric music by Philippe
Sarde, Techine contrasts the sisters’ hum-
drum lives with the wildly romantic
fantasies they created in such novels as
“Wuthering Heights” and “Jane Eyre.” Blu-
ray extras include a 60-minute documen-
tary featurette and audio commentary. The
film is in French with English subtitles.
“Star Trek: The Next Generation - The
Fourth Season” (Paramount Home Enter-
tainment), new on Blu-ray, offers deeper
character development than earlier sea-
sons, making this season one of the best.
The six-disc set contains all 26 episodes,
beginning with the Season 3 cliffhanger,
“The Best of Both Worlds (Part 2),” an
exciting episode in which Riker (Jonathan
Frakes) is promoted to captain and com-
mands a fleet of starships to confront the
Borg. Filled with neat visual effects, rous-
ing music, phaser fights, and outer space
(continued on Crossword page)