Film Review
The grim realities of everyday life in Britain of the late 1950s, early
1960s was a subject that a new wave of British filmmakers took to their
hearts, and in doing so helped to bring about a renaissance in British
cinema around this time. Mirroring France's Nouvelle Vague, this
new breed of British film auteur had an immediate and lasting impact on
the landscape of British cinema, and their so-called 'kitchen sink
dramas' would prove popular not only with the critics but also the
cinema-going public. At the time, Britain was beginning to emerge
from a long period of austerity that dated back to the end of the
Second World War, and whilst living standards were steadily improving,
housing was in short supply, wages were low, and career options for the
young remained few and far between. To compound this misery, the
old moral values were still in force - sex before marriage was frowned
upon, abortion was illegal and any man who put a woman in 'the family
way' was expected to marry her at once, whether he loved her or
not. The high divorce rates seen in later decades have a lot to
do with the social strictures imposed upon young people of this time.
It is these harsh facts of life circa 1960 that director John
Schlesinger preserves for posterity in his sombre but highly engaging
debut feature,
A Kind of Loving.
Based on a novel by Stan Barstow, the film was sensitively scripted by
Keith Waterhouse and Willis Hall, who would also collaborate with
Schlesinger on his next film,
Billy Liar (1963), which deals
with similar themes, from a slightly more humorous angle. Like
his British New Wave contemporaries Tony Richardson and Lindsay
Anderson, John Schlesinger tacitly avoids sentimentalism and
moralising. Instead, he shows us life as he saw it in the early
1960s, with young people muddling through as best they can, constrained
not only financially but also by the morals of an older generation from
which they feel increasingly alienated. "They don't know they're
born" is how these old timers judge their erring offspring, assuming
that because they are materially better off than their parents were at
that age they have no reason to be less happy.
A Kind of Loving presents a
far messier kind of romantic entanglement to that which cinema
audiences (accustomed to the Hollywood 'happy ending') would have been
used to at the time, but it is one which is unquestionably far closer
to the reality experienced by most young people becoming acquainted
with the facts of life. Its two protagonists Vic and Ingrid -
faultlessly interpreted by Alan Bates and June Ritchie - are a man and
a woman who clearly have no deep feelings for one another. What
they call love is no more than pure animal lust, and once the
biological function controlling their actions has been accomplished the
only thing that keeps them together is a hollow pact called
marriage. Without this empty social convention, and the parental
pressure that makes it binding, Vic and Ingrid would gladly go their
separate ways as soon as they have been spared the obligation to bring
up a child. Not only do they have nothing in common, they have no
appreciation of the other's feelings and seem to resent their differing
social backgrounds. (Ingrid's mother - an absolutely monstrous
Thora Hird - considers herself vastly inferior to Vic's parents because
she lives in a semi-detached house, owns a television set, and can
afford to pay some poor wretch to clean her windows.) It is what
society expects of these two completely mismatched individuals that
forces them to stay together and try to find 'a kind of loving',
although the likelihood is that one will end up beating the other to death.
Schlesinger's social realism is of a somewhat gentler hue than Tony
Richardson's, but the frustrations and bitterness of a disenfranchised
younger generation, whilst not spilling over into outright anger, are
never far from sight. Like all young people of their age, Vic and
Ingrid want only to be free and happy, but these are the two things
that an absurdly moralistic society denies them. Once Vic has got
Ingrid 'into trouble' (of course, it's always the man's fault and
only the man's fault) he is as
free as a murderer who has handed himself over to the police.
Before he knows it, the shackles are on and he is serving the first
stretch of his life sentence, penned in with a wife he can barely stand
and a fire-breathing mother-in-law he would gladly burn at the stake if
witch-burning was still a socially acceptable preoccupation.
There's no pathos, no attempt by the writers, director or actors to
make us shed any tears for the young man who has made his own private
hell and his equally egoistical wife, but their plight still moves us
because it is something we can so easily identify with. So
naturalistic are the writing and performances that Vic and Ingrid look
more like real people in a documentary than characters in a fictional
drama - ordinary beings of flesh and blood learning to live according
to what society expects of them and what their own circumstances will
allow. There is a tart, wistful poignancy in the ending, a hint
perhaps that it will all turn out right in the end, but the overriding
impression is one of mourning for all those lives that have been
blighted by society's narrow conception of respectability. The
bleak urban landscape adds the right note of solemnity to the film,
reminding us that paradise lies elsewhere, not in the smoky deprived wastelands
of England's industrial north. Schlesinger's penetrating
debut film resounds not with anger but with the grudging sadness of a
pilgrim being forced down a road he'd rather not travel, to a place of
despondency he knows his soul will not bear.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
Vic Brown is a draftsman at an engineering factory in a Lancashire town
in the northwest of England. In his early twenties, he still
lives with his parents in their terraced house but has hopes of moving
away and making his fortune elsewhere. Then Ingrid Rothwell, a
girl in the typing pool, catches his eye. Whilst the attractive
blonde is not the kind of girl he'd ever thought of marrying, Vic just
can't get her out of his head. Ingrid is equally taken with Vic,
and after a few awkward meetings they are kissing and professing love
for one another. Ingrid isn't yet ready to begin a physical
relationship but the mutual attraction becomes too strong to
resist. Vic is shocked when, not long afterwards, Ingrid
confronts him with the news that she is pregnant with his child.
Vic has no choice but to do the decent thing, which is to marry Ingrid
against his wishes. Unable to afford a place of their own, the
couple move in with Ingrid's punctilious mother, who makes no attempt
to disguise her contempt for her son-in-law. Vic appears unmoved
when Ingrid has a miscarriage and he aggravates his mother-in-law
further by going on a pub crawl with a friend. His marriage now
looking as if it is well and truly over, Vic returns to his family, but
finds no sympathy from that quarter. It is up to him to sort out
the mess that he has made of his life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.