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DESCRIBING
its plot may create the mistaken impression that We Think the
World
of You (Cinecom) is just a kinky British love triangle about
two men and a dog. It's that and more, directed with true Brit
class consciousness by Colin Gregg from a novel by Joseph R.
Ackerley, one of the first modern homosexual authors to break
out of his closet.
Alan Bates plays a gay middle-aged
businessman named Frank whose lover (Gary, Oldman, roughing out
one more vibrant character sketch in his gallery of rogues) is
married, obviously bisexual and in jail for burglary While Johnny
the housebreaker sweats it out behind bars, his beloved dog Evie,
a rambunctious German shepherd, starts fur flying in a heated
custody battle involving Johnny's wife, his old mum and stepdad
and Frank, who ultimately becomes more obsessed with Evie than
with her absent master.
Bates eases into his role with
grand English finesse, not quite concealing a smirk of superiority
and noblesse oblige as he drops pound notes among Johnny's working
class kin. Although the dog, as always, is a scene stealer, Evie
(played by a bitch named Betsy) gets stiff competition from the
company she keeps in this mordant domestic drama with a cutting
edge of wounding humor.
Bruce Williamson, Playboy, February 1989 ©
Playboy Enterprises

THE
CONSIDERABLE, not always cozy charms of postwar British comedy
merge with the nervier pleasures of new English cinema in "We
Think the World of You," Colin Gregg's shaggy-dog story
of a man, the man he loves and the German shepherd that comes
between them.
With a screenplay by Hugh Stoddart,
based on a semiautobiographical novel by J.R. Ackerley, the film
has the fondness for literary sources and old-trouper actors
so characteristic of traditional British film. The part of the
story that deals with class conflict might just as well have
been plotted at Ealing Studios; and even the sexual theme might
have gotten past the censors in the old days, given a few judicious
changes. In those times, the older, upper-class character, instead
of being a literary type who likes young men, might have been
a naval officer, concerned in a fatherly way with the cockney
lad who had served under his command. That's how things were
done in the 1950s - at least in films - which is one of the points
that keep coming up in "We Think the World of You."
Political Defiance
The film not only recalls the manners of the 1950s
but imitates the period's movies as well, from the grainy black
and white of the opening sequence to Julian Jacobson's zingy
score, heavy with woodwinds and xylophones. The mildness of tone
is another pan of this impersonation - which, curiously enough,
underscores what's new and aggressive in the film. The older
man is not a fatherly naval officer. He is the young man's lover,
with no explanations given or, for that matter, expected. One
may regard this matter- of-fact attitude as artistic insouciance;
but recent changes in British law have added to its meaning.
In view of the statute forbidding the promotion of homosexuality
(whatever that means), "We Think the World of You"
reads like an act of political defiance - a genial but firm refusal
to go back to the 1950s.
 Frank
(Alan Bates) has achieved a modus vivendi with young Johnny and
with Johnny's wife, Megan. (The latter are played by Gary Oldman,
best known for "Prick Up Your Ears," and Frances Barber,
the Rosie of "Sammy and Rosie Get Laid," who merely
by their presence add a subtle, new-cinema dimension to their
roles.) Frank is warmly protective with Johnny, icily polite
with Megan and generally satisfied with things as they are.
Then comes the rupture: Johnny
is arrested on a burglary charge and put away for a year. To
Frank, this turn of events seems not much worse than an inconvenience.
He handles it by venturing into the slums once a month to visit
Johnny's mother and stepfather, to drink tea, chat with urbane
self-assurance and leave a few pounds in the jar on the mantel.
Except for his jealousy at Megan's being allowed to visit Johnny
in prison, Frank handles it all with equanimity until he meets
the dog.
Love and Class
No, not a dog: a slobbering, fourlegged id; a chained
brute, howling for freedom out of the depths of the slums; a
misty-eyed innocent, abused and neglected; an ideally compliant
lover, eager for Frank's every touch; a hairy, pointy-eared,
mammalian sponge, ready to soak up every emotion in her vicinity.
When Frank first sets eyes on her, Evie seems to be no more than
a German shepherd. But by the end of the film, when we see her
snuggling up with Frank before the fireside, brandy at hand and
"La Traviata" on the gramophone, Evie has concentrated
all the complexities of love and class into her sleek brown form.
 The
film's younger generation of actors could hardly be more convincing.
Oldman with a succession of unexplained but quite plausible cuts
and bruises about his head, Barber with a blank-faced stare that
seems the incarnation of workingclass passive resistance. The
old troupers are a delight as well, with Liz Smith and Max Wall,
as Johnny's flirtatious mother and dour stepfather, bringing
lifetimes of character tics to their roles. Best of all is Alan
Bates, who performs with remarkable aplomb, considering that
he plays most of his scenes opposite not only a dog but also
a couple of children who might have been cast by the ghost of
W.C. Fields. Bates responds to this challenge much as Frank responds
to the frustration and irrationality that surround him: with
the frayed patience of a man who believes that he, perhaps alone
in the world, is being reasonable. If you have been lucky enough
to see Bates's impersonation of Guy Burgess in "An Englishman
Abroad," you will know what order of pleasure to anticipate.
Betsy, in the crucial role of
Evie, proves to be a screen discovery with star potential. I
only hope that filmmakers resist the obvious temptation and avoid
casting her against Mike, who was terribly overrated in his last
outing with Paul Mazursky.
Stuart Klawans, The Nation, 2 January 1989,
© The Nation Company Inc.
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- We Think the World of You (Roger Ebert review)
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