The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsTCM tonight: BRITISH NEW WAVE
(Some good ones)
8:00 PM
Room at the Top (1959)
1h 55m | Drama | TV-PG
A young accountant claws his way to the top in the boardroom and the bedroom.
Director
Jack Clayton
Cast
Laurence Harvey, Simone Signoret, Heather Sears
10:15 PM
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1961)
1h 30m | Drama | TV-14
A factory worker lives for the chance to have fun on the weekends.
Director
Karel Reisz
Cast
Albert Finney, Shirley Field, Rachel Roberts
12:00 AM
Billy Liar (1963)
1h 36m | Comedy | TV-PG
An emotionally stunted clerk retreats into his fantasies.
Director
John Schlesinger
Cast
Tom Courtenay, Julie Christie, Wilfred Pickles
3:15 AM
A Taste of Honey (1962)
1h 40m | Drama | TV-14
Deserted by her mother, a pregnant teen turns to a gay friend for help.
Director
Tony Richardson
Cast
Dora Bryan, Rita Tushingham, Robert Stephens
Paladin
(28,243 posts)Late 50's-early 60's was a glorious time for movies from Great Britain. Everybody enjoy.
Full Moon and great movies, I'll be up LATE 'tonight.'
Diamond_Dog
(31,907 posts)IcyPeas
(21,841 posts)I don't know why I am drawn to this genre. Thanks for posting. Gonna watch!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitchen_sink_realism
The films, plays and novels employing this style are often set in poorer industrial areas in the North of England, and use the accents and slang heard in those regions. The film It Always Rains on Sunday (1947) is a precursor of the genre and the John Osborne play Look Back in Anger (1956) is thought of as the first of the genre. The gritty love-triangle of Look Back in Anger, for example, takes place in a cramped, one-room flat in the English Midlands. Shelagh Delaney's 1958 play A Taste of Honey (which was made into a film of the same name in 1961) is about a teenage schoolgirl who has an affair with a black sailor, gets pregnant and then moves in with a gay male acquaintance; it raises issues such as class, ethnicity, gender and sexual orientation. The conventions of the genre have continued into the 2000s, finding expression in such television shows as Coronation Street and EastEnders.[1]