Roger Ebert Home

Feast of July

In the opening scenes of "Feast of July," a young woman makes her way across one of those landscapes that seem to exist for the purpose of illustrating Victorian novels. The sky is dark and lowering, the wind bites sharply across the heath, and she staggers into shelter just in time to give birth to a stillborn child, and bury it. Then she somehow makes her way into a grim little village, where a local man takes pity on her and invites her home.

The man is Ben Wainwright (Tom Bell), and his family consists of his wife (Gemma Jones) and his three sons: Jedd (James Purefoy), an Army man; Matty (Kenneth Anderson), a shoemaker, and Con (Ben Chaplin), the youngest, who seems a little slow and socially maladroit. Mrs. Wainwright cares for the homeless woman, named Bella (Embeth Davidtz), and learns or guesses much of her story.

It is clear to us that the introduction of this attractive young woman into the household is going to cause problems, but it is not clear to Ben, who tells her she can stay if she will help with the family's work. Soon all three sons are smitten with her, but she takes pity on young Con, who seems helpless and identifies more with his pet pigeons than with other people.

Meanwhile, Bella's past is revealed. She was seduced and abandoned by a slick-talking cad named Arch Wilson (Greg Wise), who told her he lived in this village. That was a lie, along with almost everything else he told her, and when one day she sees him in a street and follows him, she discovers that he has also deceived another young woman. Meanwhile, Con proposes marriage, and to the astonishment of the familyBella accepts.

That leads to a final showdown between Con and Arch Wilson, and the kind of bleak Victorian conclusion we would expect from Wilkie Collins, or George Gissing. It is a little surprising to find it comes from a novel by H. E. Bates (1906-1974), a modern figure.

My problem with the film was that none of the characters is really interesting. Even Bella, well played by Davidtz (from "Schindler's List"), seems like a pawn in a melodrama rather than a woman with ideas of her own. Her choice of Con for a husband is inexplicable: He seems slow and uninteresting. Ben, the father, is curiously detached from his family, and not perceptive. Mrs.

Wainwright, the mother, is perceptive, but nothing is made of that.

And the conclusion of the film is bleak without being meaningful.

Roger Ebert

Roger Ebert was the film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times from 1967 until his death in 2013. In 1975, he won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism.

Now playing

Top Gun: Maverick
Crush
The Essex Serpent
18½

Film Credits

Feast of July movie poster

Feast of July (1995)

Rated R For Brief Violence and Sexuality

118 minutes

Cast

Embeth Davidtz as Bella Ford

Tom Bell as Ben Wainwright

Gemma Jones as Mrs. Wainwright

James Purefoy as Jedd Wainwright

Directed by

Screenplay by

Based On The Novel by

Latest blog posts

Comments

comments powered by Disqus