
‘Harvest' Review: When the Land Was Home
It's only after this introduction that we come to find out who Walter is, and where we are. This is Scotland, near the dawn of the modern age, and Walter lives in a tiny village, far from anything resembling a real town. It's so small that it doesn't have a name. The handful of residents there farm the land, which belongs to Master Kent (Harry Melling), a kind and good man, if a bit of a weakling.
Walter once was Master Kent's manservant and was raised from infancy as his best friend. But Walter fell in love with a girl in the village — and with the land on which she lived, down by the water. So he moved out of the big house and into one of the thatched ones, and though the xenophobic villagers distrust anyone who isn't one of their own, he began the life of a farmer and slowly managed to become one of them.
But now his wife is gone. He has a transactional sort of relationship with a village widow named Kitty (Rosy McEwen), but for the most part he lives like a bachelor, and happily. When 'Harvest' begins, though, that tranquillity is about to be ravaged. First there's a fire. Then, a set of strangers show up in the village: three intruders with unknown intentions, and also a mapmaker (Arinzé Kene), hired by Master Kent to survey the land. With them they bring the outside world, and an uneasiness that only accelerates when a snobbish aristocrat (Frank Dillane) shows up.
'Harvest,' which takes place over one week's time, is gorgeous and strange and a bit winding, though not unpleasantly so. It's adapted by Tsangari and Joslyn Barnes from Jim Crace's novel, with ample voice-over and a lot of thick Scottish accents — I saw it with subtitles. The cinematographer Sean Price Williams shot the movie on 16 mm, which lends it a textured, almost grubby feel at times, as if the film itself has come to us from the past and might disintegrate into dust.
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