ON THE
WSWS
Donate
to
the WSWS!
News Feed
Contact
the
WSWS
Editorial
Board
New
Today
News
& Analysis
Workers
Struggles
Arts
Review
History
Science
Polemics
Philosophy
Correspondence
Archive
About
WSWS
About
the ICFI
Help
Books
Online
OTHER
LANGUAGES
German
French
Italian
Russian
Polish
Czech
Serbo-Croatian
Spanish
Portuguese
Turkish
Sinhala-
Tamil
Indonesian
LEAFLETS
Download
in
PDF format
|
|
WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
An unwelcome trend in British filmmaking
Last Orders, written and directed by Fred Schepisi
By David Walsh
22 March 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Last Orders, written and directed by Fred Schepisi, based
on the novel by Graham Swift
In Fred Schepisis Last Orders four men travel
by car from south London to the Kent coast to scatter the ashes
of a dead friend (and in one case, adoptive father) in the sea.
In the course of the journey the four recollect the man, Jack
Dodds (Michael Caine), and their relations with him, extending
back to the Second World War. Doddss widow, Amy (Helen Mirren),
has chosen to spend the day, as she has done once a week for decades,
visiting her brain-damaged daughter, whom Jack has always refused
to acknowledge. She too remembers the past, with its pleasures
and pains.
The tone of the piece is vaguely elegiac. The owner of a butcher
shop, Jack always wanted Vince (Ray Winstone), the adopted son,
to go into business with him. Instead Vince has become a successful
hustler of a car dealer. Ray (Bob Hoskins), a racing tipster,
has always had a passion for Amy, and we learn, once carried on
a brief affair with her. Vic (Tom Courtenay), an undertaker, found
out about that relationship, but kept his tongue. The other passenger
in the car, Lenny (David Hemmings), a one-time boxer and retired
fruit and vegetable man, has a bone to pick with Vince, because
the latter got his daughter pregnant years before.
And so it goes, in a fairly routine fashion. A few stops for
drinks, some quarreling, some reminiscing. While the film never
entirely collapses into sentimentality and nostalgia, it certainly
teeters on the brink of doing so.
Last Orders celebrates or memorializes, almost without
criticism, a way of life associated with postwar Britain, the
dying tremors of a generation, in the words of one commentator.
Another critic, approvingly, describes the films subject
as the ordinary bravery of carrying on. A third observes,
again approvingly, that the film suggests that Britain has
remained ... a nation of shopkeepers. Schepisis film
has generated the sort of commentary and praise that one might
have expected to encounter in a discussion, lets say, of
the Noel Coward-David Lean production, In Which We Serve
(1942), the canny propaganda vehicle of the British war effort.
A film critic wrote about that work: Aboard Cowards
fictional HMS Torrin there existed forties British society
in microcosm. Here everybody knew his place.... The one thing
they all had in common was the knowledge that each of them, high
or low, was expected to show unswerving loyalty and devotion to
duty.
The most remarkable feature of Last Orders, 60 years
later, is the virtual absence of anti-establishment sentiment.
The difficulties or disappointments the characters have experienced
are nearly all of their own making: Jack has been obstinate with
his son and insensitive to his daughter; Lenny failed as a boxer
because of laziness and a drinking habit; Vince, perhaps because
he was adopted, developed an aggressive, violent side to his character;
Ray has been too accommodating and suppressed his real feelings
and desires, and so on. Amy, of course, is a saint.
I cant recall another British film, ostensibly surveying
the entire postwar period, which made so little reference to institutions,
parties, class realities. Last Orders portrays a snug and
complacent, if emotionally turbulent, little world. And something
of a fantasy. Not only do none of the phenomena that one might
expect to chance upon, no matter how obliquely, in such a workfor
example, the Labour Party, Thatcherism, the trade unions, the
welfare state, the end of the British empirecome in for
a single reference, there is no sign whatsoever of their socio-psychological
impact. The only serious financial crisis that arises in the film
is resolved by the happy outcome of a horse race.
Ones astonishment at the general tone of the piece reaches
a peak in scenes in which the characters make reverent stops at
the Royal Naval Memorial in Chatham and Canterbury cathedral on
their way to Margate. Vic smiles fondly as he recalls his happy
wartime days, and the warm memories (of wrapping the bodies of
dead sailors!) are not disrupted by the disrespectful remarks
of the obviously disoriented Lenny. The critic in the Guardian
took note of the sequences and observed sympathetically that all
the characters are moved in different ways and made to feel
an affinity with the nations past. Indeed, and the
implied social subservience and patriotism are rather sickening.
Such scenes would have been unthinkable in British art
films of another day.
Some unhealthy social and intellectual process, bound up with
the effort to defend British national identity in
a time of political and social turmoil, is at work here.
British social realism of the past 40 yearswhether in
novels, plays, films or on televisionhas hardly been immune
from criticism; on the contrary, it has on occasion appeared to
beg for criticism. Nonetheless, this trend represented as a whole
an effort to confront the truth that the postwar reformist scheme
of British capitalism had failed, that class difference and social
inequality persisted, and that the psychic wounds left by this
social failure remained and were festering. This school of realism
communicated, at the very least, the genuine anguish and pain
experienced by wide layers of the population victimized by schools,
factories, reformatories, prisons, the military, government bureaucracy
and the other institutions of official Britain. All this vanishes
in Last Orders in the hazy glow of a neighborhood pub.
This falsity inevitably finds expression in the texture of
the film, which is labored, lacking in spontaneity, forced. The
humor is not terribly humorous, the dramatic confrontations largely
predictable, the situations trite. There are truthful and human
moments, but they are few and far between. And, frankly, even
of the best moments one is inclined to think one has seen them
before, in other films, only done more artfully and with more
depth. The actors do their best, but they are defeated by the
essentially shabby and conventional material.
It was not always thus. The histories of the performers point
to the transformation that has taken place within significant
layers of the British artistic milieu.
Courtenay, a wonderful actor, first came to attention in Alan
Sillitoe-Tony Richardsons The Loneliness of the Long
Distance Runner (1962), as a rebellious youth at odds with
a repressive reformatory governor. He appeared two years later
in Joseph Loseys King and Country, an indictment
of the military high command in World War I and war generally.
Hemmings is best known as the callow and amoral fashion photographer
in Michelangelo Antonionis Blowup (1966), which,
whatever else it might have been, provided a scathing picture
of swinging London. The actor also appeared in Richardsons
The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968), an attack on British
imperialism and the military.
The remarkable Helen Mirren had a career with the Royal Shakespeare
Company, when that troupe was associated with artistic and ideological
adventure, and in 1972 joined radical stage director Peter Brooks
International Centre of Theatre Research. She also had a role
in Lindsay Andersons O Lucky Man! (1973), an
allegory for the pitfalls of capitalism, in the words of
one commentator.
Caine, a talented and engaging performer, has had a more mainstream
character to his career even from the beginning, but his persona
in his early work was the angry, alienated Cockney, in Alfie
(1966), and even as Harry Palmer in The Ipcress File (1965)
and Funeral in Berlin (1966)
(Hoskinss career has had a different trajectory, as he
did not really become a leading performer in films until the 1980s,
a period of general decline.)
It is not that all the rebelliousness has necessarily been
knocked out of the performers. One doesnt know. They may
remain very much themselves. But a great deal of rebelliousness
has been knocked out of the writers and directors currently dominating
the British cinema. (Or, for that matter, the Australian cinema.
Schepisi was a member of the Australian New Wave of
the 1970s; he is principally remembered as the director of The
Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith [1978]. Most of his subsequent
films, such as Mr. Baseball and I.Q., are not to
his credit.) The patriotic nostalgia in Last Orders is
the other side of the coin to the mindless violence of that other
popular British trend, the London gangster film. Both currents
are set within a distinctly nationalist and conformist framework
that obscures critical social truths.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |