The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain Movie Review
The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain Review
"The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain" Overview

Rating: PG
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Christopher MongerProducer : Sarah Curtis
Screenwiter : Christopher Monger
Starring : Hugh Grant,Tara Fitzgerald,Colm Meaney
If you're expecting a big joke about the unfortunate title of this film, you'll
be disappointed. Everyone else has done it already. I saw the film late, and
I'm just not falling into that trap.
With that out of the way, The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a
Mountain refers to the title character, Hugh Grant, who is given this wacky
Welsh nickname as the result of some wacky events surrounding the wacky title
hill/mountain.
The story is a classic comic farce. Set in 1917, in the village at the foot of
the mountain, Ffynnon Garw, a pair of surveyors from England come to the
village to measure its height. Grant is Anson, as one of the surveyors who
recently returned from World War I only to find himself shell-shocked so badly
that public service is his only apparent employment option.
When Anson measures Ffynnon Garw, he finds it to be just a bit too short to be
called a mountain. Now the Welsh take their mountains very seriously, and this
is quite a blow to the village, so with the aid of villagers Morgan (Colm
Meaney), Betty (Tara Fitzgerald), and a host of others, they conspire to keep
the surveyors in town long enough to pile enough dirt atop Ffynnon Garw to push
it into mountaindom. Through high school-style pranks and the affectionate
ministrations of Betty, Anson stays in town long enough to be charmed by its
beauty, simplicity, and fraternity.
Some of this works. Some of it doesn't. The Englishman can be hilarious at
times, and really quite silly at others. In fact, Fitzgerald, who is normally
the embodiment of the phrase "ingenue," looks downright goofy with her 1917
Shirley Temple curls and period dress. I couldn't take her seriously at all.
Worse still, the critical romance developing between her and Anson is
completely unbelievable, and was a real stumbling block for me.
Otherwise, the film is good, if not entirely memorable, featuring some
excellent bit players and an original story (but not too original--the story of
Ffynnon Garw is true). The film drags a bit here and there, but the ending had
me walking out with a smile.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





