Film Review
One of the major achievements of British cinema in the 1960s,
If... is both a satire on the old
public school system, one of the country's most archaic institutions, and a
powerful allegory on Britain's class-ridden society at a time when
discontent, particularly amongst the young, was beginning to transform
into rebellion. The school setting provides an effective
microcosm for British society, in which privilege stems from rank not
intellectual ability, and rank is exploited to the full by those who have it.
Some would argue that things have not changed much since, that Britain
is still pretty much governed by a self-serving upper-crust elite
who constantly play the system to their advantage.
If... is the best and arguably
the most important film to be directed by Lindsay Anderson, a leading
figure in British New Wave cinema of the sixties and an emblematic
figure in the prevailing counter culture. The film won Anderson
the coveted Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1969
(interestingly, the festival had been cancelled the previous year as a
gesture of solidarity with students and strikers who had risen up in
open revolt against the French government, albeit without machine guns
and grenades).
Jean Vigo's classic French film
Zéro de conduite (1933)
provided both the inspiration and the structure for the film.
(Appropriately, Vigo was the son of a renowned anarchist.) There
are also similarities with Jean-Luc Godard's
La
Chinoise (1967) and
Week End (1967), films which,
like
If..., argue that
violent revolution might be an acceptable, indeed the inevitable, means
for achieving a desired political change. Although Anderson
denies being influenced by contemporary events, the film does appear to
mirror the political uprisings which took place in the United States and
Paris in 1968.
Although the film was originally intended to be shot entirely in
colour, Anderson decided to shoot several sequences in black and
white. This was partly for budgetary reasons but also because of
the limited time available for the shooting of the chapel scenes.
The mix of colour and black and white appears to be completely
arbitrary, in much the same way as the switches between fantasy and
realism. The effect is to reinforce the impression of a
well-ordered world that is slowly fragmenting into anarchy as the
forces of individualism begin to assert themselves.
If... marked the screen debut
of Malcolm McDowell, in a career-defining role that presages the one he
would subsequently play in Stanley Kubrick's
A Clockwork Orange (1971) - the
juvenile delinquent with an unmistakable psychopathic streak. McDowell
would reprise the role of Mick Travis in two sequels directed by
Lindsay Anderson, in which his character would continue his one-man
crusade against the British establishment:
O Lucky Man! (1973) and
Britannia Hospital (1982).
These films paint a depressing picture of a Britain in which change for
the better is constantly inhibited by bureaucratic inertia and
political complacency. Plus ça change...
© James Travers 2009
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Next Lindsay Anderson film:
This Sporting Life (1963)
Film Synopsis
The summer holidays over, the boys at an old public school return for
the start a new term, which for most will consist of abject misery and
abuse meted out to them by their seniors. One of the older boys,
Mick Travis, has found an interest in revolution and guerrilla warfare
during the summer and begins to provoke the school prefects, or Whips,
by casually challenging their authority. In the end, the patience
of the Whips is exhausted and they attempt to bring Travis and his two
fellow conspirators to heel by giving them the thrashing of their
lives. Far from crushing Travis' rebellious nature, this
humiliation hardens his resolve to end this reign
of oppression...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.