The kids show off their pluck in Swallows and Amazons

(From IMDb.com)

The Walker four and the Blackett pair are most definitely British kids floating around in their boats on the lake they reluctantly share in Swallows and Amazons. After all, the 2016 family adventure/drama directed by Philippa Lowthorpe with a screenplay by Andrea Gibb was derived from not one, but two of the popular 1930s children’s books by British author Arthur Ransome.

But those on this side of the pond who chose to take in the spy/pirate/coming-of-age piece, including the patrons who can see it for free at 3:30 p.m. Friday, March 2, in the Liverpool Public Library’s Carman Community Room, need not feel foreign about the flavor.

Watching the plot unfold as eldest Walker child John attempts to make a lake-worthy crew out of his two sisters, eager eldest sister Susan, budding writer Tatty, and youngest Roger, one could easily imagine them floating around a lake in Central New York during any decade from then to … well, not quite now, but perhaps right up to the turn of the century, anyway.

They’ve borrowed a small boat named the Swallow from friends of the family, and off they go to claim an island as their own. On that journey they encounter two robust kids with a Jolly Roger as their flag who maintain the island already is sovereign to them, the Amazons.

As a proper and compelling side story comes adult neighbor Mr. Jim Turner, aka Captain Flint, a houseboat owner with plenty to hide and a grudge against Patrick as wide as the lake.

Learning about life. (IMDb.com)

All six kids show their petty and competitive sides, on water and land, until they are forced to grow up fast on a common mission to save something far greater than themselves.

It’s all rather quite interesting, and the young actors do their jobs well as the mystery unfolds.

8 thoughts on “The kids show off their pluck in Swallows and Amazons

  1. Hi Mark – this was filmed at one of my favourite places where we have spent lots of family holidays. We’ve rowed a boat on the lake and walked up the hills around it. Hope you and Karen are doing well.

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    • It looks beautiful, Rachel! I’m glad to hear you’ve spent time in this marvelous place. Karen and I are well, thank you. I hope you, Steve and the teens are having a good winter, too, my friend.

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