The Wild Heart Although he had been involved throughout the filming, Selznick disliked the finished film, and sued The Archers, Powell and Pressburger's production company, in order to change it. He lost the court case but discovered that he had the right to change the film for its American release. Selznick had the film reedited and some extra scenes shot in Hollywood under director
Rouben Mamoulian to create the version known as
The Wild Heart (1952). Selznick's changes were mostly additions to the film: a prologue, explanatory scenes (often literally, with labels or inscriptions on items) and more closeups of his wife, Jennifer Jones. The most infamous of the alterations are the scenes at the end when Jones is supposedly carrying a tame fox—in the additional scenes, the fox is obviously a stuffed toy. Selznick also deleted several scenes that he felt had lacked dramatic impact, some of which were major plot points. In his autobiographies, Powell claimed that Selznick only left about 35 minutes of the original film and that everything else in the American version was shot by Mamoulian.
Restoration The original version of
Gone to Earth was fully restored by the
British Film Institute's
National Archive in 1985. A
New Statesman review called the restored film "one of the great British regional films" and, according to Powell's cinematographer
Christopher Challis, "one of the most beautiful films ever to be shot of the English countryside."{{cite web Both versions of the film are now available in the U.S. on Blu-ray disc from
Kino Lorber Studio Classics (under license from
The Walt Disney Company and current copyright holder
ABC). ==In popular culture==