Songcatcher | |
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Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Maggie Greenwald |
Produced by | Richard Miller |
Written by | Maggie Greenwald |
Starring |
Janet McTeer Aidan Quinn Michael Davis Michael Goodwin Jane Adams E. Katherine Kerr Emmy Rossum Pat Carroll |
Music by | David Mansfield |
Cinematography | Enrique Chediak |
Edited by | Keith Reamer |
Distributed by | Lionsgate |
Release date
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Running time
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109 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1,800,000 (estimated) |
Box office | $3,050,934 |
Songcatcher: Music from and Inspired by the Motion Picture | |
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Soundtrack album by various artists | |
Released | January 23, 2001 |
Genre |
Country Film score |
Label | Vanguard |
Producer | David Mansfield |
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | link |
Songcatcher is a 2000 drama film directed by Maggie Greenwald. It is about a musicologist researching and collecting Appalachian folk music in the mountains of western North Carolina. Although Songcatcher is a fictional film, it is loosely based on the work of Olive Dame Campbell, founder of the John C. Campbell Folk School in Brasstown, North Carolina, and that of the English folk song collector Cecil Sharp, portrayed at the end of the film as professor Cyrus Whittle.
In 1907, Dr. Lily Penleric (Janet McTeer), a professor of musicology, is denied a promotion at the university where she teaches. She impulsively visits her sister Eleanor (Jane Adams), who runs a struggling rural school in Appalachia. There, she discovers a treasure trove of traditional Scots Irish ballads, which have been preserved by the secluded mountain people since the colonial period of the 1600s and 1700s. Lily decides to record and transcribe the songs and share them with the outside world.
With the help of a musically talented orphan named Deladis Slocumb (Emmy Rossum), Lily ventures into isolated areas of the mountains to collect the songs. She finds herself increasingly enchanted, not only by the rugged purity of the music, but also by the courage and endurance of the local people as they carve out meaningful lives against the harsh conditions. She becomes privy to their struggles to save their land from Earl Giddens (David Patrick Kelly), representative of a coal mining company. At the same time, Lily is troubled when she finds that Eleanor is engaged in a lesbian love affair with her co-teacher at the school.
Lily meets Tom Bledsoe (Aidan Quinn), a handsome, hardened war veteran and talented musician. Despite some initial resentment, she soon begins a love affair with him. She experiences a slow change in both her perception of the mountain people as savage and uncouth, and of her sister's sexuality as immoral. Hoping to help share the culture of the mountain people with the wider world, Lily convinces Clementine McFarland (Rhoda Griffis), an art collector, to purchase a painting done by a local woman.