1993: Gadael Lenin (Leaving Lenin), about a group of Welsh students and teachers who take a trip to
Russia, was directed by
Endaf Emlyn.
1993:Tân ar y Comin, based on the novel by T. Llew Jones, about a young Romani who lives an idyllic life with his grandfather. Also released under the English title "A Christmas Reunion" (1994).
1941: How Green Was My Valley was a classic directed by
John Ford. It won five
Academy Awards, including Best Director and Best Picture. However, the film is often criticised for the actors having Irish accents, as several of them were Irish, and for having a scene with an Irish jig instead of a traditional Welsh dance. Ford's response to these criticisms were simply, "It's a Celtic country, isn't it?"[2]
1952: Girdle of Gold, a comedy set in Wales about Evans the milk and Griffith the hearse searching for a pair of corsets. Directed by
Montgomery Tully.
1976: Whispers of Fear A woman inherits an old house in Wales, but is driven to madness and murder by jealous locals. Directed by
Harry Bromley Davenport.
1983: House of the Long Shadows was directed by
Pete Walker. It comments on the nationalism of the Welsh, especially the older generation, who hate the English; the American jokes that he should wear a
leek to show he's a friend. Vincent Price, who has a Welsh surname, plays a character who describes Wales as his ancestral homeland. His character's family appears to be English, however.
2001: Endgame was directed by
Gary Wicks; much of the film takes place at the main character's Welsh cottage.
2002: On All Floors was directed by Geoff Evans and written by Craig Handley.
2002: Plots with a View (aka: Undertaking Betty), was directed by
Nick Hurran and starred
Brenda Blethyn,
Alfred Molina,
Christopher Walken, and
Lee Evans. This brilliant, but commercially unsuccessful, black comedy about competing undertakers in the small fictional Welsh village of Wrottin Powys won the BAFTA Cymru Award in 2003. It is not yet released in the UK.
2003: Otherworld, the English-language version of the film Y Mabinogi, is listed above in the Welsh-language section.
2013: A Field in England, a psychedelic horror film set in 17th century Monmouthshire (a county of contemporary Wales, but which was not clearly labeled as part of Wales at the time).
2018: Say My Name was set on a Welsh island but filmed around Cardiff, directed by
Deborah Frances-White.
2018: Last Summer, four boys roam free through a neglected rural paradise in Wales, until a tragedy strikes, directed by Jon Jones.[3][better source needed]
2019:
Gwen is a folk tale set and filmed in Snowdonia during the industrial revolution. Directed by
William McGregor.
1970: The Molly Maguires, directed by
Martin Ritt and starring
Sean Connery, tells the story of the Irish labor troubles in the anthracite coal mines of
Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania. Several characters, including the police chief Davies (played by Englishman Frank Finlay), and a miner Jenkins (played by Englishman John Alderson), are Welsh.
1971: Two English Girls (Les Deux anglaises et le continent) was directed by
François Truffaut. Despite the title, the titular "English girls" are actually both Welsh.
1979: The Life of Brian, a film by
Monty Python, features a character named Judith (played by
Sue Jones-Davies) who is referred to by Brian's mother as a "Welsh tart." Several other references to Welsh characters can be gleaned from the screenplay.[4]
1980: The Falls, directed by Welsh-born filmmaker
Peter Greenaway, references the Welsh-born character Tulse Luper.
2000: The Man Who Cried, about a Jewish girl who leaves the
Soviet Union to be raised in England, utilises a Welsh music teacher to help aid in the girl's assimilation to English culture. As he was not allowed to speak Welsh but succeeded professionally after learning English, so will she succeed if she abandons her native tongue.
1985: The Black Cauldron. While animated, the filmmakers filmed background footage inside the slate caverns in Snowdonia. Directed by
Richard Rich,
Ted Berman. Also based on Welsh mythology.
1971: In Straw Dogs, directed by Sam Peckinpah, a
Cornish vicar uses the Welsh place name Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch as the magic word in a magic trick he performs.
2019:
Saint Maud, written and directed by Rose Glass; the main character speaks Welsh.
2021:
The Green Knight (film), written and directed by David Lowery, starring Dev Patel. An Arthurian tale, but also refers to the legend of
Saint Winifred.
1993: Gadael Lenin (Leaving Lenin), about a group of Welsh students and teachers who take a trip to
Russia, was directed by
Endaf Emlyn.
1993:Tân ar y Comin, based on the novel by T. Llew Jones, about a young Romani who lives an idyllic life with his grandfather. Also released under the English title "A Christmas Reunion" (1994).
1941: How Green Was My Valley was a classic directed by
John Ford. It won five
Academy Awards, including Best Director and Best Picture. However, the film is often criticised for the actors having Irish accents, as several of them were Irish, and for having a scene with an Irish jig instead of a traditional Welsh dance. Ford's response to these criticisms were simply, "It's a Celtic country, isn't it?"[2]
1952: Girdle of Gold, a comedy set in Wales about Evans the milk and Griffith the hearse searching for a pair of corsets. Directed by
Montgomery Tully.
1976: Whispers of Fear A woman inherits an old house in Wales, but is driven to madness and murder by jealous locals. Directed by
Harry Bromley Davenport.
1983: House of the Long Shadows was directed by
Pete Walker. It comments on the nationalism of the Welsh, especially the older generation, who hate the English; the American jokes that he should wear a
leek to show he's a friend. Vincent Price, who has a Welsh surname, plays a character who describes Wales as his ancestral homeland. His character's family appears to be English, however.
2001: Endgame was directed by
Gary Wicks; much of the film takes place at the main character's Welsh cottage.
2002: On All Floors was directed by Geoff Evans and written by Craig Handley.
2002: Plots with a View (aka: Undertaking Betty), was directed by
Nick Hurran and starred
Brenda Blethyn,
Alfred Molina,
Christopher Walken, and
Lee Evans. This brilliant, but commercially unsuccessful, black comedy about competing undertakers in the small fictional Welsh village of Wrottin Powys won the BAFTA Cymru Award in 2003. It is not yet released in the UK.
2003: Otherworld, the English-language version of the film Y Mabinogi, is listed above in the Welsh-language section.
2013: A Field in England, a psychedelic horror film set in 17th century Monmouthshire (a county of contemporary Wales, but which was not clearly labeled as part of Wales at the time).
2018: Say My Name was set on a Welsh island but filmed around Cardiff, directed by
Deborah Frances-White.
2018: Last Summer, four boys roam free through a neglected rural paradise in Wales, until a tragedy strikes, directed by Jon Jones.[3][better source needed]
2019:
Gwen is a folk tale set and filmed in Snowdonia during the industrial revolution. Directed by
William McGregor.
1970: The Molly Maguires, directed by
Martin Ritt and starring
Sean Connery, tells the story of the Irish labor troubles in the anthracite coal mines of
Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania. Several characters, including the police chief Davies (played by Englishman Frank Finlay), and a miner Jenkins (played by Englishman John Alderson), are Welsh.
1971: Two English Girls (Les Deux anglaises et le continent) was directed by
François Truffaut. Despite the title, the titular "English girls" are actually both Welsh.
1979: The Life of Brian, a film by
Monty Python, features a character named Judith (played by
Sue Jones-Davies) who is referred to by Brian's mother as a "Welsh tart." Several other references to Welsh characters can be gleaned from the screenplay.[4]
1980: The Falls, directed by Welsh-born filmmaker
Peter Greenaway, references the Welsh-born character Tulse Luper.
2000: The Man Who Cried, about a Jewish girl who leaves the
Soviet Union to be raised in England, utilises a Welsh music teacher to help aid in the girl's assimilation to English culture. As he was not allowed to speak Welsh but succeeded professionally after learning English, so will she succeed if she abandons her native tongue.
1985: The Black Cauldron. While animated, the filmmakers filmed background footage inside the slate caverns in Snowdonia. Directed by
Richard Rich,
Ted Berman. Also based on Welsh mythology.
1971: In Straw Dogs, directed by Sam Peckinpah, a
Cornish vicar uses the Welsh place name Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch as the magic word in a magic trick he performs.
2019:
Saint Maud, written and directed by Rose Glass; the main character speaks Welsh.
2021:
The Green Knight (film), written and directed by David Lowery, starring Dev Patel. An Arthurian tale, but also refers to the legend of
Saint Winifred.