Film Review
By the time Tony Richardson came to make
The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner,
British cinema's virulent outbreak of gritty social realism had all but
run its course, and this could explain some of the quirkier aspects of
Richardson's athletics-themed film. Looking suspiciously like a
remake of François Truffaut's
Les 400 coups (1959), complete
with some obvious Nouvelle Vague touches (including aggressive jump
cuts and sequences speeded up for comic effect, à la Godard),
The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner
offers yet another 'angry young man' shot of kitchen sink
realism. The film was scripted by Alan Sillitoe, whose similarly
themed novel,
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning,
had previously been adapted to great effect by Karel Reisz.
Tom Courtenay achieved instant stardom through this, his first screen
role, as the cunning working class rebel who seeks to take a stand
against a class-ridden society that fills him with disgust.
Courtenay's compelling performance gave cinema one of its most
convincing portrayals of youth alienation and serves to anchor the film
in the grim reality which Richardson, with a surprising lack of
restraint, seems determined to undercut with his frivolous attempts at
humour. Of the angry young men that smacked their way onto
British cinema screens in the late 1950s, early 1960s, Courtenay's
Colin Smith is arguably the most well-rounded and believable, although
the means by which he achieves his personal victory is somewhat
bewildering. By refusing to give in to authority, Colin denies
himself the prospect of improving his fortunes and thereby escaping a
life of working class drudgery. He cuts off his nose to spite his
own face - a strange way of putting two fingers up to Britain's
intractable class system.
Imperfect though it is,
The
Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner is one of Tony
Richardson's most incisive and likeable films, not quite as genuine as
his earlier masterpiece
A Taste of Honey (1961), but
nonetheless a thoughtful and engaging study in class
disenfranchisement. The characters are convincingly drawn (more
so than the out-dated archetypes of previous films of this ilk) and
colourfully portrayed by a talented cast. The enlightened
amiability of Michael Redgrave's prisoner governor is soon worn away to
reveal a toe-curling patrician; James Bolam's Mike (Colin's buddy) is a
youthful forerunner of the actor's popular
Likely Lads character; and Avis
Bunnage is irredeemably tragic as Colin's pathetic, self-centred
mother. Frank Finlay and James Fox also put in brief appearances,
at the start of their illustrious careers.
Amidst this glittering ensemble, Tom Courtenay stands out as a young
actor with an obvious flair for conflicted character portrayals.
The unsettling surface calm of Courtenay's performance belies the fury
that rages beneath. Courtenay doesn't need to snarl and lash out
like a deranged animal as Albert Finney had done in
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning.
We can see his anger and contempt plainly in his face, a cold mask of
defiance against a world that is to him nothing more than a meaningless
charade. Don't let the crass comic interludes deceive you.
This is British social realism at its most bitter and unforgiving.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Colin Smith, a rebellious young man from a working class background in
Nottingham, ends up in borstal after robbing a bakery. The
prisoner governor is impressed by his potential as a long distance
runner and encourages him to train for a competition against a nearby
public school. By complying with the governor's wishes, Colin
earns himself privileges, which include going for long cross-country
runs outside the prison gates. On one such run, Colin recalls the
events that led to his arrest. It began shortly after the death
of his father. His old dad was barely in his grave before his mum
had squandered his insurance money and started seeing another
man. Egged on by his friend Mike, and determined to rebel against
a society he has come to despise, Colin was easily led into a life of
crime...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.