Film Review
After making a splash with his social realist debut feature
A Kind of Loving (1962),
director John Schlesinger went on to direct one of the enduring classics of 1960s British cinema.
Billy Liar may not be as grim as the 'kitchen sink'
dramas being turned out by Schlesinger's contemporaries Karel Reisz (
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning),
and Tony Richardson (
Look Back in Anger),
but it still evokes the sombre reality of life in Britain in the dreary '50s,
a decade when resources were scarce and opportunities for a better life few and far between.
A poignant character study of a no-hoper who is forever trapped in his
working class milieu, the film was based on a popular West End
play (first performed in 1960), which was itself derived from a novel
by the well-known British journalist Keith Waterhouse. The
central idea clearly derives from James Thurber's short story
The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, which
had previously been made into a
film with Danny Kaye.
Billy Liar deals with a theme
that was popular in British and American cinema at the time - a young
person rebelling against the crushing tedium and injustices of adult
life. Here, the hero fights the system not by openly revolting
against it but by flitting in and out of his imaginary world in which
he is the ruler, dispensing sadistic death to all who displease
him. The tragedy is that Billy's fantasy exerts such a hold on
him that he is incapable of changing the real world or even escaping
from it to make a better life for himself. He is trapped and will
ultimately learn to accept the mediocrity into which he was born.
Using real industrial locations (in Bradford, Yorkshire) and depicting familiar,
down-to-Earth situations, the film has the stark realist style of the
kitchen sink dramas of the period, something that adds greatly to the
poignancy of the hero's predicament. We can appreciate why Billy
needs to escape to somewhere better; Ambrosia, with its pomp and
pageantry, is a young man's Paradise in comparison with the tatty
grey-washed reality of Stradhoughton, the town in which he lives.
John Schlesinger's direction is as slick and imaginative as the stylish
black and white cinematography is beguiling. The quality of Keith
Waterhouse and Willis Hall's screenplay is amply matched by the
arresting character performances. Tom Courtenay portrays the
mythomaniac Billy so convincingly and with such sympathy that the
downbeat ending has the impact of a Greek tragedy (the actor had
previously played the part in the West End stage play, having taken
over the role from Albert Finney). The excellent supporting cast
includes such well-known faces as Leonard Rossiter and Rodney Bewes,
who would both have high-profile careers on television over the following
decade. Within a few years of appearing in this
film, Julie Christie would become one of British cinema's best-known icons -
she starred in Schlesinger's subsequent films,
Darling (1965) and
Far from the Madding Crowd (1967).
In the mid-1970s,
Billy Liar
was made into a popular British TV sitcom (with Jeff Rawle playing
Billy) and then a West End musical entitled
Billy (starring Michael
Crawford). However, neither of these is a patch on John
Schlesinger's magnificent 1963 film, which is still considered one of
the triumphs of post-war British cinema.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Billy Fisher is 19, lives with his parents in a glum north English town
and works as a desk clerk for a firm of undertakers. He retreats
from the boredom of his everyday existence into his own dream world,
Ambrosia, where he is the leader of a great militaristic nation.
Billy is also a compulsive liar and now tries to convince everyone that
he has been offered a job writing gags for the famous comedian Danny
Boon. Billy's economy with the truth is about to get him into hot
water, particularly with the two girls he has managed to get himself
engaged to. The only person who seems to understand him is Liz,
his third girlfriend. She offers him the chance to start a new
life with her in London...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.