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  • Stage Door Theatre, San Francisco; May 19, 1965. Perfect venue for such things; an East Side art house in a West Coast town. I truly enjoyed every minute of this movie that night, and I still love it today. Rod Taylor was the ideal choice for the lead role in this always interesting vision of early life and career of Irish playwright Sean O'Casey, from his autobiog.

    Dublin in the 1920s, with all the period feel and detail John Ford and Jack Cardiff could muster, beautifully photographed in Color and on location by Ted Scaife.

    A splendid cast brings the days of O'Casey and the Troubles to vibrant and bitter life. Taylor's best work in many ways, though he did so many good movies and gave so many good pefs in his heyday, it's hard to pick just one.

    Maggie Smith is marvelous as Cassidy's lost love: "I'm a small simple girl. I need a small simple life, not your terrible dreams and your anger." Smart girl, but two hearts are broken as Cassidy boards the boat for parts unknown.

    Julie Christie's a revelation as Daisy, one of three stunningly good perfs she delivered in her Oscar winning golden year. Michael Redgrave is just right as Yeats; and Flora Robson gets a late career lift as Cassidy's Ma.

    The entire production takes the viewer back in time to the turbulent setting of O'Casey's youth, in an exceptionally good yet unfairly overlooked film.
  • rajamieson22 December 2006
    Interesting biopic of O'Casey - named John Cassidy here - based on the pre-exile, Irish part of his life. The cast is very high-powered and the cameos by Michael Redrave (as W.B.Yeats) and Edith Evans (as Lady Gregory) are superb - as is a young Maggie Smith as O'Casey's girlfriend. Julie Christie looks great, but doesn't have much to do. Rod Taylor is surprisingly good in the main role, but I feel it suffers a little from the change of director, and is ultimately unsatisfying, rather rushing towards its conclusion. It could have been a great movie, but the pacing is off. For me, the 60s Dublin locations are the real stars.
  • keiljd16 March 2002
    Stage Door Theatre, San Francisco; May 19, 1965. An East Side arthouse in a West Coast town; the perfect venue for the pictorial beauty and distinctly Irish attitude of this largely forgotten film. Superb perf by Rod Taylor, an ideal choice for the title role, in an always interesting vision of the early life and career of Irish playwright Sean O'Casey, from his autobiography. Dublin in the 1920s, with all the period feel and detail John Ford can muster. He fell ill and was replaced by Jack Cardiff, who carried on seamlessly. Ted Scaife photographed it brilliantly, in gorgeous Color, on actual locations. A splendid cast brought the days of O'Casey and the Troubles to vibrant and bitter life. Rod Taylor's best perf in many ways, though he did so many good movies and gave so many fine perfs during his heyday, it's hard for me to choose just one. Maggie Smith is marvelous as O'Casey's lost love: "I'm a small simple girl. I need a small simple life, not your terrible dreams and your anger." Smart girl, but two hearts are broken as Sean boards the boat for parts unknown. Julie Christie's a revelation as Daisy, one of three stunningly good perfs she gave in her golden year. Michael Redgrave's perfect as Yeats; and Flora Robson gets a late career lift as O'Casey's ma. The entire production takes the viewer back in time, to the setting of this exceptionally good and unfairly overlooked film.
  • Two scenes, but one of them is the best of the whole movie:the mother's death.The camera only shows the hero when he enters the fateful room;we see the tragedy on his face longer than usual before the camera reaches the deathbed.There's a similar scene in JF 's "three godfathers" when the outlaws meet the dying mother in her wagon.The second scene is the fight in the pub which recalls "the quiet man" .

    As for the lead,Ford wanted Sean Connery but he was too busy playing OO7.The female parts are strong,featuring Flora Robson,Maggie Smith and Julie Christie ,but the latter only appears for a few minutes.A lot of colorful characters ,from the stingy heartless undertakers to the "keep cool boy" grocer,from the old lady mixing with the riffraff by welcoming the playwright's committed dramas to the obscure librarian ,give the movie substance.

    These two scenes and "Seven women" two years later were John Ford's swansong.
  • "Young Cassidy" was to have been directed by John Ford, but he had to withdraw owing to illness about three weeks into filming, and was replaced by Jack Cardiff, who was credited as director. Had Ford completed it, it would have been his penultimate film; he was to complete one more film, "Seven Women", the following year. Ford was himself of Irish descent and occasionally made films on Irish subjects, such as "The Quiet Man".

    The film is a biography based upon the life of the dramatist Sean O'Casey, here called John Cassidy. (O'Casey's original name was John Casey, although his family also used the name Cassidy. He Gaelicised his name to Seán Ó Cathasaigh and eventually settled on Sean O'Casey, a compromise between the English and Irish forms). The name may have been changed to allow the film-makers greater freedom to introduce fictional elements into O'Casey's life. For example, in 1926, the year the film ends, he would have been 46, no longer particularly "young" and more than a decade older than Rod Taylor was in 1965.

    The film opens 1911 when Cassidy is working as a labourer in Dublin and chronicles the beginning of his literary career, ending with the performance of his play "The Plough and the Stars", which provokes a riot at the Abbey Theatre. The film also chronicles his relations with his family, his love life and his commitment to both socialism and Irish nationalism. Other historical figures are introduced, such as W.B. Yeats, Ireland's leading writer who hails Cassidy as an outstanding new talent, and the literary patron Lady Gregory.

    The film's main weakness is perhaps summed by a critic's reaction to one of Cassidy's plays, namely that it is strong on character and weak on plot. The same could be said about the film itself. Although the various characters are well developed, there is no strongly developed plot line. There are occasional action sequences, in themselves well done, such as the scenes of the "Dublin Lock-Out" (a violent industrial dispute) of 1913, the Easter Rising of 1916 and the "Plough and the Stars" riot, in between these the film is rather static and dominated by conversation

    Potentially interesting themes tend to be dealt with in a throwaway manner. Cassidy's girlfriend Nora rejects his proposal of marriage and leaves him, even though she is deeply in love with him, because she fears that marriage will have a deleterious effect on his artistic creativity. The idea of a woman sacrificing her happiness for her lover's art could have been an interesting one- could, indeed, have furnished the subject-matter for a whole film- but here it is dealt with very briefly.

    Similarly the film touches on, but does not really deal with, the underlying tension between the two political causes to which Cassidy gives his allegiance- socialism, with its ideals of international brotherhood, and Irish nationalism, with its ethos of "ourselves alone" (the literal meaning of the Irish phrase Sinn Fein). It was in fact this tension which led to the "Plough and the Stars" riot, when conservative, middle-class nationalists in the audience took exception to O'Casey's more left-wing perspective and what they saw as his disrespectful attitude to the "heroes" of the Easter Rising. (They also objected to his treatment of religion and sex, especially his making one of his characters a prostitute; in the film one protesting woman exclaims that there is not a single prostitute in the whole of Ireland!)

    The film does, however, also have its strong points, and its two greatest strengths are its sense of place- the Dublin of the 1910s and 1920s is brought vividly to life- and the acting. Strangely enough, few of the leading actors were actually Irish- Taylor was Australian and Maggie Smith, Julie Christie, Michael Redgrave, Edith Evans and Flora Robson were all English. (Christie received second billing even though for such a well-known actress she had a surprisingly small role, that of Cassidy's early mistress Daisy Battles). Nevertheless, the Irish accents are well done and never go over the top as sometimes happens with English actors called upon to play Irish roles. Taylor makes Cassidy a strong and rugged hero, and Robson is particularly good as Cassidy's stoical, long-suffering working-class mother.

    "Young Cassidy" has its points of interest, but overall I felt that O'Casey was obviously a fascinating character, both as a man and as a writer, and that a stronger biography could have been made of him. 6/10
  • Sean O'Casey was born John Casey, so a film about his early life that calls him John Cassidy makes sense in a sort of way. The film is based on his autobiographies (there are 6 volumes I believe) which are apparently quite readable but not entirely trustworthy. As a committed socialist (even a communist) and protestant O'Casey was to find he had no place in the conservative, catholic Ireland of De Valera. This is the great central irony of the man's life (and of the history of Irish literature of the time), that one of the few great Irish writers to deal directly with the Troubles was eventually driven from the country - so much so that he spent the last 35 years of his life in England and never once went back home. The film "Young Cassidy" is a pretty decent attempt to capture the man and his oddities. Rod Taylor looks nothing like the man but gives an energetic, likable performance. Other performances are OK and it is always nice to see Michael Redgrave, here as Yeats (he looks as little like the real man as Taylor does). Started by John Ford this looks like one of his Irish pictures but thankfully never descends into the blarney that films such as "The Quiet Man" did (Jack Cardiff who directed most of the film deserves more credit than he is usually given for his role). Filmed in Dublin it has a very authentic look. The main problem is in toning down O'Casey and his politics, he was far more radical than he was portrayed here and also far more of an irritant (to whatever country he lived in). In summary a decent biopic, overlooked but worth watching by Ford fans or those interested in Ireland.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Rod Taylor is young John Cassidy, later to become Sean O'Casey. He's a jolly working-class guy digging ditches and helping to scratch out a living for him, his mother (Flora Robson), his sister (Sian Phillips) and her children, and his brother (Jack McGowran) in their shabby Dublin flat in the 1920s.

    Not only is the apartment pretty crummy, the paper peeling off the walls, the furniture old and rudimentary, but there's literally hunger because nobody can scrape together enough in the way of wages to be sure of a food supply.

    Cassidy gets involved with the Irish resistance but deems to foolish when their leader demands they wear colorful uniforms and march like an army rather than wearing ordinary clothes and fighting like insurgents.

    He's not involved in any of the shootings that went on but he does agree to pen propaganda leaflets and write inflammatory articles for the newspapers. He also has a quick affair with a prostitute (Julie Christie) and falls in love with a bookstore owner (Maggie Smith) who catches him trying to swipe half a dozen books on outré subjects like "Cavalry Tactics in the Sudan." Cassidy gets a check for some of his writing. Fifteen glorious pounds. And he needs it because his sister has just died and now his mother is deathly ill at home and there isn't enough food or tea, let alone medicine. She dies at home and the funeral director refuses to remove her body until he's paid. In an incident reminiscent of a scene in "Crime and Punishment," Cassidy runs around trying to get cash for his fifteen-pound check. He seems never to have SEEN a check before and has no clear idea of what it is. Meanwhile his mother's body lies in its casket in the parlor, while the black-clad vultures from the undertaker sit there tapping their fingers with impatience.

    That, roughly, ends the first half of the movie. The second takes us from Cassidy's poverty and love affairs to his literary career, in a rather abrupt shift. I mean, Cassidy had to teach himself to read and write and it appears that overnight he's a playwright.

    He meets the aristocratic dramatist Lady Gregory (Dame Edith Evans) and the perceptive William Butler Yeats (Michael Redgrave), both of whom, along with others, founded the Abbey Theater in Dublin. The Abbey was to stage several of Cassidy's plays, including "The Plough and the Stars" and "Juno and the Paycock." "The Plough" caused a riot. It was considered undignified, profane, because it cast aspersions on Ireland and because it included a prostitute in Act II. His literary success cost Cassidy dearly though. He loses his best friend, who has found the play repulsive and personally insulting. And he loses his lover, Maggie Smith, who feels that she can't accompany him on what she predicts will be a rise to dizzying literary heights.

    It's curious, though not mentioned in the film, that the Irish nationalists we see are of mixed religions. Cassidy himself was a Protestant and so was Lady Gregory. Yeats was not a Catholic and neither was George Bernard Shaw. The armed conflict that was restarted in Northern Ireland in the 1970s was clearly divided along religious lines, but the nationalist movement of Cassidy's time was not.

    Where was I? The film is beautifully photographed. As it should have been, the director having been a splendid cinematographer himself. (See "Black Narcissus" if you have a chance.) Much of the neighborhoods we see are those dismal row houses flung up during the Industrial Age to accommodate the disenfranchised who flocked to the cities looking for wage work. The buildings themselves are of dingy gray brick, and residents tried to brighten them up by painting the doors and window casings a bright color -- white, or sometimes crimson or sky blue, and sometimes a deep dull green which was, in my opinion, a damned big mistake, unless you want your residence to look like Sing Sing.

    Rod Taylor does a professional job as a cocky but tormented young man. Julie Christie seems to be in the movie only to show that Cassidy isn't very discriminating in his love life -- and because she is, after all, Julie Christie. The oustanding performance is Maggie Smith's. She's youthful and radiant in a unique way.

    John Ford began directing the movie before it was necessary to shovel him off to the states, disheveled and drunk. I was trying to pin down the footage that might have been his and came down on two scenes: (1) the many elderly ladies wearing shawls and repeatedly making the sign of the cross as Cassidy's mother's body is loaded aboard the hearse. (2) A rollicking fist fight in a saloon that ends with both sides piling onto a carriage and singing. Maybe two more. When the new flag is revealed, the camera rolls across the solemn faces of the IRA as they reverently remove their caps. And another moment when Cassidy is on a picnic and an explosion sounds from Dublin, signaling the beginning of the revolution. There is a huge close up of Cassidy's face as he stares at the smoke billowing above the city and mutters, "The fools. The magnificent fools." Of course all these scenes might have been directed by Jack Cardiff. Anybody can make a mistake.

    Nice job, though, overall. Well worth seeing if it shows up, which it rarely seems to do.
  • "Young Cassidy" is a film about the life of the famous Irish writer and dramatist, Sean O'Casey. It follows him from around WWI to his becoming famous, of sorts, in the late 1920s. Oddly, as you watch the film you'll probably assume it all takes place over one or two years...but 15 to 20 is more like it...and the actors and time never seem to pass.

    The story was originally to have been made by John Ford, which isn't surprising due to his love of all things Irish in his movies. It follows O'Casey (Rod Taylor) from working as a day laborer to his becoming a hated dramatist, as you see one of his plays being booed and attacked by many.

    I gave this movie a 6 because it tries hard and offers some nice moments. But it was a hard sell to me because the film made O'Casey seem like a bit of a jerk and I really didn't have all that much interest in him and his life. I am not sure if it's because O'Casey was a jerk or just because of the screen play. I just found myself not caring much about him or his life.
  • "Young Cassidy" is one of my all time favorite movies. I am a big fan of Sean O'Casey, and became a big fan of Rod Taylor's when I first saw this film over 35 years ago. It used to be shown every St. Patrick's day, like The Informer and The Quiet Man, I believe it was WOR, Channel 9 (now the UPN) here in NY, then it just disappeared, and I have been unable to find a VHS or DVD copy of it, a real shame. John Ford worked his usual magic and was well replaced by Jack Cardiff (after Ford fell ill), and a wonderful vision of Ireland in the early 20th Century took shape. It tells of Young Jack Cassidy (O'Casey) and his attempts to break out of the poverty cycle he has been trapped in, to get away and pursue a career as a writer. He is faced with the prejudice that all "common" Irish faced, and then has to survive the madness that overtakes Dublin during the "Easter Rebellion" of 1916, before he finally gets a chance and sails off to London. I have not seen this film in 20 years, and I wish I knew why it was so unavailable. It adheres quite well to O'Casey's Autobiographies, though it is more fun to read his words than see them portrayed.
  • I was most amused to see the credits start presenting a John Ford film and the credits ending with "directed by Jack Cardiff."

    I believe John Ford was responsible for a few scenes in the film, including the scene where Rod Taylor (Sean O'Casey/Cassidy) enters the room where his mother (Dame Flora Robson) lies dead. This sequence is extraordinary--described and narrated by Taylor's monologue and actions. This does not stand up to the quality of the rest of the film, which is below average. Now Cardiff is a good cinematographer. He has to deal with a great cast assembled by Ford, who individually perform very well, and are captured well by Cardiff's visual eye but lack the vision of a great director to string the pearls together into a great necklace. The film's ending is amusing--a poor man turned rich man handing a crown to a vagrant who appreciates the worth of the money. What had the ending to do with what preceded it? If anything, the final scene is ambiguous and one begins to wonder whether the director was making a hero of Sean O'Casey or was he chastising him as are the film's oblique comments on Yeats living in sheltered house, policed by the British. The poor man turned into a rich and famous playwright is presented to us in fits and starts. The film did have a good intention but it lapses into mediocrity. Only two characters develop well--the mother (Robson) and Nora (Maggie Smith).

    Julie Christie is mesmerising in any film but her character is never developed. Maggie Smith has charmed audiences over the years but this film is definitely one of her finest. Dames Robson and Evans are daunting thespians. Add to them Michael Redgrave. All great actors--including Aussie Rod Taylor. The film does not end with a bang but with a whimper.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Occasionally effective, but mostly dull and disappointing, Young Cassidy suffers principally from the miscasting of Rod Taylor in the title role. He doesn't look right, he doesn't act right, and above all he lacks the charisma and personality needed to sustain audience interest over what seems an incredibly long 108 minutes. Nor – as often happens in these cases of main role mishaps – do the support players rally to the hero's rescue. Dame Edith Evans is impossibly mannered and theatrical as Lady Gregory (admittedly her lines are trite), while Sir Michael Redgrave makes of the romantic Yeats a drearily pompous stuffed shirt. Even the usually ultra-reliable Flora Robson plays her part –as one critic aptly commented – with an oddly absent-minded air. Indeed, aside from Julie Christie's exciting presence in a tiny role, and a gallery of highly credible Irish studies from many of the bit players, acting is hardly Young Cassidy's strong point. The screenplay must also take its fair share of blame. The plot is episodic and loosely constructed, the characters not only one dimensional but stereotyped, the dialogue dry. As for its philosophy, whilst O'Casey's anti-British sentiments are given a good innings, his equally virulent anti-clericalism is not mentioned at all. Not so much as a whisper. Yet, as said, the anti-British stuff is played up. In fact, the early scenes of police brutality when dispersing striking transport workers and of the army gunning down innocent bystanders during a siege of the rebel-held post-office, are by far the most effective in the movie. Taken as a whole, however, the writing lacks power. Nor must we exclude the director. When Ford fell ill after directing a few days' work with Rod Taylor and Julie Christie, Jack Cardiff took over. Aside from the two action scenes described above, Cardiff's direction rarely rises above the commonplace. It lacks soul. Heart. The ability to inspire.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It's possible that if John Ford's health had permitted him to finish Young Cassidy we might have gotten a better version of how Sean O'Casey saw himself in this world. The film is based on his autobiography where he himself decided to rename the central character Cassidy. I'm guessing that was to allow for a bit of dramatic license. As if anybody with the slightest familiarity in Irish history isn't going to know who wrote The Plough And The Stars.

    O'Casey who was somewhat of a curmudgeon in his old age as was John Ford might have appealed to one another, one curmudgeon to another. In fact Ford directed the film version of The Plough And The Stars, a much underrated film which had a little too much Ford and not enough O'Casey in it.

    Anyway Ford dropped the project and acclaimed British cinematographer Jack Cardiff picked up the ball. The usual roughhouse Ford type monkeyshine comedy could have been dropped in a few places during this film, might have given it a lift.

    O'Casey(Cassidy) comes from a hardscrabble background, a brilliant mind though that couldn't be kept down by poverty. He's one of several offspring in a house presided over by the wise and patient Flora Robson in a part that Jane Darwell would have done in America a generation earlier. She and Sian Phillips as his sister deliver some fine performances.

    The title role is played by Rod Taylor who was at the apex of his career at the time. He does a splendid job in capturing the youthful vitality and intelligence of a laboring man with a vision and a voice to capture what he sees. In fact his vision too accurate for some and I'm not talking about the occupying English.

    O'Casey as played by Taylor reminded me almost hauntingly of George Gershwin as he was portrayed by Robert Alda in Rhapsody in Blue. Gershwin like O'Casey was so driven by his art that in the end no woman ever bonded with him intellectually. O'Casey as well is ultimately driven so by his need to express that the women are both attracted and feel inadequate for him. Everyone from young Julie Christie as a tart, to prim bookseller Maggie Smith in two of their earliest screen roles. The end when Smith tells Taylor she can't go on with him is a haunting one.

    I've never been to Dublin so I'm not sure how much it has changed from the years of the Rebellion to the Sixties, let alone a new century. But Jack Cardiff's cinematographer's eye does a great job in capturing same. Ditto in fact for the scenes in the Irish countryside which are as beautifully photographed as Ford's classic The Quiet Man.

    Sean O'Casey can well lay claim to being Ireland's first man of letters and that's bucking some heavy competition like George Bernard Shaw and Oscar Wilde for instance. But those two worthy writers got their main success abroad, O'Casey wrote and told the story of his people in the fashion of the hated Cromwell, 'warts and all.' His story is Ireland's at the birth of freedom.
  • If you can ignore Sean O'Casey commitments to labor unions, socialism, and his many years on a blacklist (subjects that are not favorites in Hollywood), this is a well-cast, workman-like biopic. It is especially pleasing, I'm sure, for anyone sentimental about the Old Sod, like John Ford, its original director, whose illness necessitated replacement by Jack Cardiff. It celebrates O'Casey's early struggles as a laborer, rebel, and innovative playwright subject to much vilification. His love of family and a couple of young women offers most of the entertainment. An 8 minute long behind-the-scenes documentary about this film was also made ("Sean O'Casey: The Spirit of Ireland" (1965)).
  • The life story of Dublin playwright Sean O'Casey (here called Johnny Cassidy!) has a sweeping, arty direction by Jack Cardiff, with assistance from John Ford, but it is full of characters who fail to come to life despite a sterling cast of players. Adapted from O'Casey's autobiography "Mirror in My House", film is saddled with too much melodrama and sideline romances. The location filming is excellent, and Maggie Smith gives a standout performance as a spinster bookseller, but there's not enough heart in the handling. In the lead, Rod Taylor brings his rugged handsomeness to the screen but little else. *1/2 from ****
  • Warning: Spoilers
    When John Ford fell ill, Jack Cardiff took over to direct Rod Taylor in the title role of this story loosely based on Irish writer Sean O'Casey's autobiography. Although O'Casey was a small slight man with poor eyesight that wore glasses, screenwriter John Whiting fleshed out a robust protagonist - John Cassidy - for Taylor to play, and it's one of the actor's best roles.

    John or 'Johnny' - as everyone but his mother (Flora Robson) and benefactor Lady Gregory (Edith Evans) calls him - is a man's man, a tough Irishman who tangles with the British occupier-policemen as a member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood, participating in the Dublin Lockout of 1913. But whereas the real O'Casey was more politically active and wrote with an agenda, this film's Young Cassidy is from poorer roots and writes about his working class experiences.

    Frequently shirtless Johnny is popular with the ladies as well: bedding the equally lively Daisy Battles (Julie Christie) - an 'actress'- kept woman, attracting the attention of a married apartment dweller, and romancing a wallflower librarian named Nora (Maggie Smith), who encourages his writing but is too afraid of his anger and his future to join Johnny when his prospects grow.

    Michael Redgrave plays the famous poet W.B. Yeats, who's also an Irish Free State Senator that helps Johnny refine his craft and - along with Lady Gregory - encourages and supports him as founders of the Abbey Theater, where Johnny's first play The Shadow of a Gunman opened in 1923. No mention is made of his subsequent piece Juno and the Paycock, which Alfred Hitchcock and wife Alma Reville would adapt into the 1930 film featuring Barry Fitzgerald and Sara Allgood. However, his controversial play The Plough and The Stars - and the theatergoers reaction to it - is faithfully represented.

    Also notable, Jack MacGowran plays Johnny's elder brother-actor Archie.
  • blanche-23 April 2016
    "Young Cassidy" is based on Sean O'Casey's autobiography of his early years, "A Mirror in My House."

    Set in the early 1920s in Dublin, Johnny Cassidy is from a large, working class family and, like most families, struggles to put food on the table. His sister gave him a love of reading and writing which belies his rough exterior. Johnny loves his family, and feels the loss of family members very deeply, particularly his sister and his mother (Flora Robson).

    But Johnny is young and enthusiastic, and, as portrayed by Rod Taylor, very attractive. (I don't think the real O'Casey was quite as good- looking.)

    Cassidy becomes involved with a prostitute, Daisy Battles (Julie Christie), and his good friend is Mick Mullen (Philip O'Flynn). Mick gets him involved in Irish nationalism, defending the working class, and ending the British rule over Ireland.

    Much of that activism seeps into his writing and informs it. One day, walking into a bookstore, he mets Nora (Maggie Smith), the clerk, and ultimately they fall in love.

    Little by little, Cassidy finds success as his work is published and the Abbey Theatre decides to put on his plays. This is a controversial and difficult decision, as there will be some who will find the plays unacceptable. But the founders, William Butler Yeats (Michael Redgrave) and Lady Gregory (Edith Evans) take that chance anyway.

    A powerful story with good production values that was let down by the script. It's a shame with a cast like this to give them such weak writing. Frankly, it was difficult for me to keep my attention on the movie.

    But the making of the film was not without problems. John Ford became ill and was replaced by Jack Cardiff and supposedly only 4 minutes of Ford's work remained in the finished film. Had Ford's hand been all the way through, the film might have come off better.

    Ford wanted Peter O'Toole or Richard Harris in the lead, and the role was offered to Sean Connery. Any one of them would have been effective and had great gravitas, but there was nothing wrong with Rod Taylor's work. And I think casting him gave the other actors a chance to shine as well.

    The big surprise for me was Flora Robson as Cassidy's mother. In Fire over England (1937) I would have told you she was in her fifties, so I assumed she would be doddering around in this. She was 35 in 1937 and 63 here. She's excellent as Cassidy's encouraging and loving mother.

    All in all, interesting, but for me, not really great. Deserves to be seen for the acting and the production values.
  • The early days of Sean O'Casey, played respectably by the Australian actor Rod Taylor, though I can't imagine the real O'Casey being anything like this. John Ford started the picture, took ill and was replaced by Jack Cardiff. It's not a bad film though it's far from a great one but the cast more than redeems it. If Julie Christie and Maggie Smith make for unlikely Irish colleens they at least bring a certain charm to proceedings while Flora Robson makes an effective Irish mother. The literary establishment is represented by Michael Redgrave's W.B. Yeats and Edith Evans, stealing the picture, as Lady Gregory and it's left to a fine supporting cast of Irish actors to provide local color. As a biopic it comes across as something akin to a Reader's Digest view of Irish history and Ford was always too close to the blarney to look at things objectively. It could have been so much better but it remains a very interesting curio.
  • marcslope2 April 2019
    Warning: Spoilers
    Big, expensive MGM biopic of Sean O'Casey, here called John Cassidy, which is the first odd thing. O'Casey, still alive, OK'd the screenplay (which is on the weak side), and the plays he wrote as depicted in the film are the plays O'Casey wrote, so why the name switch? "Young O'Casey" would have told audiences more. Rod Taylor, not much physically representing the title character, is nonetheless committed and fine and suitably sexy, and he's supported by an excellent cast, most prominently Maggie Smith, playing a conventional part--the spinsterish bookseller who falls in love with him--with an ambivalence that keeps us guessing about her. You'll miss Julie Christie, second-billed but in a tiny role, if you blink, and Edith Evans and Michael Redgrave are stately and predictable as the powers behind the Abbey Theatre, but Flora Robson, as Cassidy's mother, is very special indeed, and it's also fun to see Jack MacGowran and Sian Phillips as the rest of his family. John Ford started this one and Jack Cardiff finished it, bringing a superb visual sense (1910s-20s Dublin never looked so appealing) but not a lot of dramatic chops. It ends on a strange moment indeed, with Maggie leaving him because she loves him (O'Casey did marry, happily, but we see none of that), then there's a final scene after the credits that means to tie things up in a happy ending. It's misshapen, but there are some good sequences, especially involving the Troubles, and it's certainly beautifully shot.
  • This is a very typical example of good English film-making. It depicts the early life of writer Sean O'Casey; his struggle to become an established writer and his lust for women. John Ford started the direction, but he fell ill during the shooting and Jack Cardiff took over. None of this shows in the picture however. I think Rod Taylor gives his finest performance of his career in this movie; notice his good Irish accent. As a bonus you can see Julie Christie, who starred in a role in one of her first movies,and this was a teaser of what was to come. Flora Robson and Maggie Smith also appear with impeccable performances, as always.
  • SnoopyStyle18 March 2024
    It's 1911 Dublin in British ruled Ireland. Laborer John Cassidy (Rod Taylor) is struggling to make ends mean for his extended family. He gets involved with a strike where he meets Daisy Battles (Julie Christie). He tries to steal books from book seller Nora (Maggie Smith). The aspiring writer joins a militia. After a bloody battle, he starts using his pen rather than the sword.

    It's a biopic based on playwright Seán O'Casey's autobiographical novel. I don't really like Cassidy. I do wonder if Connery had play the character. The movie is trying for some irreverent broad humor, but Rod Taylor is not pulling it off. That's not even considering whether the humor works side-by-side with the serious subject matter. There is one really bad broad joke in the middle of a battle which destroys the action. John Ford started directing but illness forced him to be replaced by Jack Cardiff. I do like the early strike riot scene, but the movie becomes uneven after that. After the peace treaty, the subject turns and there is a divide in the story.
  • I thought I was going to see a Western, but I was pleasantly surprised to see a movie that actually got me to learn about something. Apparently, I had a glaring hole in my college education because I had never heard of Sean O'Casey until I watched this movie. AND I TOOK AN IRISH history class. That class unfortunately was all names and dates and timelines...this movie along with a Internet search on this movie told me more about O'Casey than that 3-credit course at a major university. Yeats loved him so that was enough to make me wonder why. I did a quick Internet search and you can read about O'Casey many places. I really found this article the most interesting though: www.threemonkeysonline.com/article2.php?id=279
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Those are the closing lines for this greatly edited version of Sean O'Casey's autobiographical story, given a fictional name (John Cassidy), yet obviously playing the great playwright who was equally as involved in freedom fighting in Ireland as he was in breaking into the theater. even the names of his plays are mentioned, with particular emphasis on "The Plough and the Stars", particularly because director John Ford (who spent two weeks directing this before leaving due to illness) directed a greatly edited film version of that play. The first half is mainly on Cassidy's family life, with hard-working, weary mother Flora Robson and sister Sian Phillips who is in a troubled marriage. at one point, Cassidy decides he wants to become literate and attempts to shoplift books from a shop run by the shy but sensible Maggie Smith. she senses something about him so she lets him take the books with promises to pay her later, and when he returns, it is obvious that our romance is growing. In time, he is breaking into the Abbey Theater, greatly mentored by Edith Evans and Michael Redgrave, and soon the toast of the Irish stage. but as his plays become more controversial, his relationship with the beautiful Maggie begins to take a toll as she sees how it has consumed him.

    Ironically, 15 years after this, three of the film's actors (Smith, Robson and Phillips) were all cast in "Clash of the Titans". Smith get special billing in this film, obviously being pushed for stardom. She certainly is not your traditional Hollywood beauty, but she is definitely beautiful. Her character is sensible and loving, no-nonsense in a non-judgmental way, and certainly worthy of finding love. Her shyness had obviously kept her character from fully living life, but when she does discover love, it comes at a price that she is not willing to pay. The last scene between her and Taylor is heartbreaking.

    Unfortunately, something seems to have been lost in the translation between page and film. it was based on a series of books and obviously was greatly edited. This could have been a good half-hour more and it would have come off more structured and detailed. The film is gorgeous to look at, and the score is breathtakingly beautiful. Julie Christie is on screen for maybe five minutes, possibly less, playing a prostitute who has an encounter with Taylor. Outside of Maggie Smith's scenes, the highlight is the goings-on at the first performance of one of Cassidy's controversial plays, nearly resulting in a riot. as much as I would love to rank this higher, it is a missed opportunity as far as really well-made drama is concerned, so I give it 9 Stars for the performances and technical detail and 5 for the film as a whole.
  • Poole6922 March 2021
    A film full of great performances and harsh editing. Truly enjoyable with great chemistry between the two primary leads of Maggie Smith and Rod Taylor, but also many great supporting performances. Great cinematography and settings, this should have been 30 minutes longer for the material to breathe and give clearer exposition.

    Still, I found this to be great cinema and an enlightening view into the art arising from the Irish rebellion.
  • Young Cassidy (1965) was directed by Jack Cardiff, who finished the film after John Ford became ill and couldn't continue. Cardiff was a good, solid director, but he didn't bring Ford's magic to the movie.

    The film is a biography of the great Irish author Seán O'Casey, whose plays are still performed today. Why the studio decided to name Casey's character Cassidy is a mystery to me. There may be some justification to this because O'Casey had taken the Irish name Seán Ó Cathasaigh during the Irish revolution.

    Rod Taylor, as Cassidy, does a good job. Julie Christie is listed as a co-star, but this just isn't true. She's not even a supporting actor--she has a cameo role.

    The rest of the cast of this movie is loaded with famous, talented actors. Dame Maggie Smith as Nora, the woman who loves Cassidy, is outstanding. She was 31 years old when the film was made, and was attractive and talented. (We somehow think that Maggie Smith always looked they way she looked in Downton Abbey. Of course, that's not so.)

    Dame Flora Robson Flora portrayed Cassidy's mother, Sir Michael Redgrave played the poet W.B. Yeats and Dame Edith Evans was Lady Gregory, a great figure in the Irish literary revival.

    This film could have been great. O'Casey was an interesting person with a colorful life. If the producers had just let his life speak for itself, the movie would have worked.

    One problem was marketing. Warner Brothers marketed the movie as "brawling, battling, earthy." The cover of the DVD shows Rod Taylor with his shirt off and his fist clenched. The cover has the quote, "That's Young Cassidy--taking on the world with two fists clenched and every male sense soaring." For the record, the film today would be rated PG-13. "Some violence, some implied sexuality."

    The editing of the movie is terrible. We see the events of the Easter Uprising in 1916, and then we hear a newsboy shouting "Peace treaty signed." The treaty was signed in 1921. Five years of fighting blithely overlooked.

    W.B Yeats and Lady Gregory did play a large part in O'Casey's career, but they appear out of nowhere. There wasn't any exposition about who they were and why they were important. If you study Irish cultural history in the 20th Century, Yeats and Gregory loom large. How many people actually know who they were? If you don't know, the movie won't clarify this for you.

    On the other hand, there are some superb scenes of police attacking strikers in the Dublin dock strike and lockout. (No real exposition about that either.) My guess is that John Ford had directed that scene before he stepped away from the film.

    There's also a powerful scene of British troops vs. revolutionaries in 1916. There was some street fighting in 1916, but most of the action took place in the Dublin General Post Office. The movie was filmed in England, and it probably was too much work to actually use the GPO as a setting.

    Young Cassidy has a very weak IMDb rating of 6.6. I think it's better than that. My guess is that many people went to see it as an action movie, and were disappointed when it wasn't. We saw the film on DVD, and it worked well enough. It's not a must-see movie, but I enjoyed it well enough to recommend it.
  • I saw this movie many years ago shortly after reading all of Sean O'Casey's memoirs (Mirrors in my Hallway) and I was surprised at how much I enjoyed the movie. Rod Taylor was perhaps too robust and handsome to play the part of the thin and bespectacled Irish writer but he did a capable job. My favorite part of the movie was when the three Cassidy brothers got into a pub brawl with a team of hurly players. I remember thinking that in the books Sean had no real liking for his brothers.

    The depiction of the hard-pressed folks of Dublin is very realistic and grim. After years of English oppression the Irish nation was ready to boil over into one final uprising to free their land from John Bull's tyranny.

    Oddly enough, Sean O'Casey spent much of his life as an exile in England. His writings like "Shadow of a Gunman" and "Juno and the Peacock" were produced in the Twenties and he never recaptured the magic once he left his native land.

    I'd recommend the movie for St. Patrick's Day viewing because of its' Irish nationalistic theme.
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