6.8
A young girl lives in the Outer Hebrides in a small village in the years just before WWI. Isolated and hard by the shore, her life takes a dramatic change when a terrible tragedy befalls her.
Hermione Corfield
Kirsty MacLeod
Morven Christie
Mairi MacLeod
Mark Gatiss
Doctor MacLean
Will Fletcher
Murdo MacAulay
Ali Fumiko Whitney
Annie MacLeod
Ian Pirie
Constable MacRae
Jeff Stewart
Skipper
David Brooks
Kirsty’s Father
Felicity Keenan
Young Kirsty
Tom Byrne
Iain Ban
Scott Miller
Calum Morrison
Alison Peebles
Old Peggy
Luke Nunn
Angus
Sean Gilder
Peter
Liam Brennan
Mack Morrison
Leigh Biagi
Morag Morrison
Forbes Masson
Minister MacIver
Frances Grey
Aileen MacAulay
Caleb Johnston-Miller
Alasdair MacAulay
Jimmy Yuill
Doctor Connolly
Director, Writer
Richie Adams
Novel
John MacKay
Story Consultant
Maryilene Blondell
July 14, 2024
7
With the Great War fast approaching, this story focusses on the young "Kirsty" (Hermione Corfield) who is well and truly enamoured of the slightly bookish "Murdo" (Will Fletcher). Their formal courtship follows all of the traditions of the Hebridean customs with due deference paid to the minister and the rules of the kirk. They do plan to marry, everyone expects and approves of that - but then the island's young men are conscripted. Individually, they might be posted anywhere but if they join up together, though, then they will be posted together - so a road dance is arranged to help send them on their way. Now plumbing on the island isn't what it might be, so "Kirsty" heads into the heather and that's where the story turns quite heinous. "Murdo" heads off to war completely unaware that his beloved is now the owner of an increasingly terrible secret that is going to change the life of her, her mother (Morven Christie) and sister (Ali Fumiko Whitney) forever. Tragedies for this girl are like busses, they take their time then come in clutches - and the surfeit of bad news facing the young girl forces her to drastic measures that require her family to rally round and shield her from the eyes of the curious constable (Ian Pirie) before coming to terms with a scenario that seems hopeless. This is a beautifully shot feature showing off the bleak beauty of the Isle of Lewis whilst showing us something of the sense of the slightly puritanical and fairly subsistence community that existed there in the 1930s. Corfield delivers convincingly as the plot develops, engaging charmingly with the young Fletcher then exuding some of the courage required by this young girl dealing with an unwanted situation on just about every front. The denouement is a little but rushed, but the film ultimately has an acceptable degree of completeness that stays just the right side of sentimentality.