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BETWEEN 1959 and 1963, the
British film industry underwent a minor revolution. Called the
new realism or the "kitchen sink" school of drama,
this movement had its antecedents in the theater, where plays
such as John Osborne's LOOK BACK IN ANGER had changed the face
of British drama. Here, working-class life was presented without
any frills and without the customary British politeness. It was
natural that the film industry should follow suit, and in the
early 1960's, a young group of film directors came into prominence
who attempted to explore relationships among the working classes
and to take films out of the studios and into the back streets
of the small drab towns in which their characters lived.
 One of the most talented of the
new directors to emerge in this period was John Schlesinger,
who had been employed as an actor and as a BBC film producer.
He had made a short documentary film for the British Transport
Committee called Terminus which depicted a day at Waterloo Station;
it attracted enough critical attention to enable him to direct
his first feature film, A KIND OF LOVING. Adapted from a best-selling
novel by provincial writer Stan Barstow, the script was well
written by Willis Hall and Keith Waterhouse, who were also to
write the next film Schlesinger directed, BILLY LIAR (1963).
The story of A KIND OF LOVING
is set against the stark, wintry background of England's industrial
North; a number of Lancashire towns were used for filming. Barstow
wrote about the milieu in which he grew up and which he knew
well -- the small-town engineering firm, the dance hall, and
the local pub. Both these settings and the use of Lancashire
colloquialisms were new to British films. Here was life as millions
of people actually lived it, a far cry from Noel Coward drawing
rooms. Alan Bates, who was known for his roles in THE ENTERTAINER
(1960) and WHISTLE DOWN THE WIND (1962), was cast as Vic Brown.
For Ingrid, twenty-year-old newcomer June Ritchie was chosen.
The film was similar to other treatments of the same theme. Audiences
had already seen and liked SATURDAY NIGHT AND SUNDAY MORNING
(1960), and some critics felt that the landmarks were becoming
too familiar. But the revolution proved all too short-lived,
and in retrospect, A KIND OF LOVING ranks as one of the few films
from that period that remains true to its working-class origins
and that still represents much that is true about life in industrial
England today.
| Courtship |
As
the film opens, Vic Brown is watching his sister's wedding and
is thinking about his own future. Among the crowd of spectators
at the church is Ingrid Rothwell, a pretty young secretary whom
Vic first noticed at Dawson Whittakers, the engineering firm
where they both work. Vic looks at her with new awareness, and
in the next few days his attempts to attract her attention make
him the butt of blunt humor among his draughtsmen colleagues
at the factory. From her studied indifference to him, it is clear
that Ingrid is also attracted to Vic.
Their romance finally starts when
Vic follows her onto a bus and invites her to the pictures with
him the following Saturday night. They hold sweaty hands in the
cinema and kiss nervously in the park. Between kisses, Ingrid
tells Vic that she was named for actress Ingrid Bergman. It is
in these early scenes of their courtship that Schlesinger catches
so well the awkwardness of those too inarticulate to verbalize
their feelings. Ingrid is worried that Vic thinks she is common,
and Vic wonders whether she is really all that interesting.
Their romance is presented with
a notable lack of sentiment. Sometimes Vic thinks he is in love
with Ingrid, and sometimes he cannot stand the sight of her.
Behind all of this young adult horseplay lurks the specter of
stability. What Ingrid wants is what every respectable young
woman wants -- a man who loves her, who will marry her, and who
will provide her with a home and children. Schlesinger sensitively
shows the conflict in a man like Vic, who also thinks those things
are worth having, but feels that maybe there is more in life.
| Affair |
 When Ingrid's mother (Thora Hird)
goes away for a few days leaving her daughter alone in the house,
Vic and Ingrid begin a full-blown affair. As soon as they make
love for the first time, Vic realizes that for him, Ingrid is
merely another girl, only a conquest. He stops coming round to
see her and weeks pass. When Vic and Ingrid next meet at the
firm's annual party, Ingrid breaks the news to him that she is
pregnant; with a tone of extreme resignation, he tells her he
will marry her.
The next and last section of the
film deals with the married life of Vic and Ingrid, and at first
glance, the material seems destined for cliche -- the vicious
mother-in-law, the neglectful husband, and the pregnant wife.
But here Schlesinger shows real mastery, for in many ways this
is the finest and truest part of the film. Whereas the first
part is about youth, horseplay, sex, and confrontation, the section
on the couple's marriage is about maturity and real change. Vic
and Ingrid are driven further and further apart by Ingrid's mother's
constant interference and obvious dislike of Vic. When Vic tries
to explain what he is going through to his married sister, she
reminds him that he has made his own bed, and now he must lie
in it. Vic feels that he and Ingrid would at least have a chance
at contentment if they had a place of their own. Things come
to a head when Ingrid has a miscarriage and Mrs. Rothwell does
not even call Vic to come to the hospital. He sees, ironically
enough, that he need not have married Ingrid after all, but his
innate decency makes him determined to find a small home for
himself and his wife, hoping that they can make a new start and
that "a kind of loving" will carry them through.
| Honesty and directness |
The honesty and
directness of A KIND OF LOVING impressed most critics. The film
made an even bigger star of Alan Bates, and John Schlesinger
went on to become a major director of both British and American
films. By the mid-1960's Britain was going through more changes,
and this type of film ceased to be popular. When the impact of
the Beatles was felt and Mary Quant and swinging London emerged,
audiences were less anxious to see films about working-class
people's problems and
instead wanted to peek in on the lives of those supposedly enjoying
the new prosperity. Two years after A KIND OF LOVING, John Schlesinger
forsook the industrial North for the world of fashion models
and public relations men in DARLING; another era in British film
was over. Not since that brief flowering in the late 1950's has
the British film industry been able to command the writing, directing,
and acting talent of so many gifted people and combine those
talents to make a group of films so essentially British. A KIND
OF LOVING represents British filmmaking at its finest. |||
© Magill's Survey of Cinema, 06-15-1995
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