Movie Description 1907. Musicologist Dr Lily Penleric (Janet McTeer) is displeased to find she has been passed over for a promotion at her East Coast University. She sets off for the southern Appalachians where her sister Elna (Jane Adams) runs a school with her friend Harriet (E. Katherine Kerr). Lily is excited to discover that the mountain women sing pure versions of old British folk songs. She starts to collect the songs--at first writing them down; then recording them on very cumbersome equipment.
Scriptwriter/director Maggie Greenwald has loosely based her movie on the songcatchers who uncovered the Appalachian-British folk song connection in the late 1910s. Greenwald and the regal Janet McTeer make Lily Penleric an aloof woman who at first sees the songs as specimens to be collected scientifically. Then gradually, Lily is drawn into the drama of the women's mountain lives--their joy and sadness, their hard fought existence, their men and their infidelities, their tolerance and intolerance. And, as she is drawn in, Lily begins to fall in love with the performers, particularly the feisty matriarch Viney Butler (Pat Carroll), and the orphan Deladis Slocumb (Emmy Rossum, a 13-year-old with an astonishing voice who makes a notable film debut).
| Credits | | Producer: | Ellen Rigas-Venetis, Jonathan Sehring, Richard Miller | | Cast: | Aidan Quinn, Greg Russell Cooke, Taj Mahal |
| Details | | Edition: | Signature Series |
Notes DVD Features:
Region 1 Keep Case Widescreen Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1 - English Additional Release Material: Audio Commentary Featurette Extended Scenes Music-Only Track Interactive Features: Interactive Menus Scene Selection Text/Photo Galleries: Cast & Crew Interviews, IN THEATRES: MARCH 2, 2001 (NY/LA) JUNE 2001 (EXPANDS)
Editorial Reviews "...Panoramic breadth and a rich gallery of well-defined characters....McTeer gives another splendid portrayal..." Movieline - Stephen Farber (12/01/2000)
"...McTeer is superb as always, the tunes are lovely, and the scenery is very pretty indeed..." Premiere - Glenn Kenny (07/01/2001)
"...McTeer and the transporting music hold you in thrall..." Rolling Stone - Peter Travers (07/05/2001)
"...A sweet, lyrical ode to rural America in the 1900's....[With a] lush scenic gloss and wonderful soundtrack of traditional songs..." New York Times - Stephen Holden (06/15/2001)
"...Beautifully photographed, brilliantly performed and richly textured....Music lovers will want to catch this one for sure..." Box Office - Annlee Ellingson (04/01/2000)
"...SONGCATCHER is fully aware of the power and vitality of its songs..." Los Angeles Times - Kenneth Turan (06/15/2001)
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