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Millions Like Us Bereavement in British Cinema The British image abroad is frequently characterized as reticent, stoic, emotionally retarded. British cinema is often seen as a staid and starchy affair, as lacking in feeling as it was in aesthetic passion. However, writing recently about British social realism, I was struck by how many good and interesting British films have focused, to one extent or another, on the grieving process. Key protagonists in these films have lost loved ones, and the films are, to varying degrees, about how they cope with their loss, with plenty of scope for emotional outburst. Perhaps the dour and grey climate lends itself to this funereal vocation… The films I chose to focus on also charted the decline of a particular conception of the British status quo, a class-based patrician commonwealth in which men and women and doctors and street cleaners knew where they stood, and policemen were there to help the lost. Despite its essential inequities and hidebound nostalgia, Old England was a gentle place of tolerance, common sense, and universal kindliness. No shopping malls, no gun crime, no underage sex (that anybody knew about). In these films, the protagonist's pain itself becomes a catalyst for the exploration of the British commonwealth and what it has become. The concision between moral decline and personal grief seems peculiarly poignant. As Millions Like Us (1943) begins, the words "and millions like you" appear, confidently addressing a mass wartime audience at a time of unprecedented national solidarity. This extraordinary social document opens with archival footage of prewar Britain, a patrician voice describing a nation at play during that final balmy summer before the blackouts, ration cards, and the bombers came. Before setting out the regulations, injunctions, exhortations, statutes, and bylaws passed by an anxious state as it watched over us, the narration strikes a lighter note as we are reminded what an orange is; once a commonplace treat, now rationed and as rare as streetlight at midnight. Notice those heroic and classically lit close-ups of startled Britons turning their faces to the heavens as an air raid begins. We hadn't seen close-ups like that since the heroic humanist documentaries of the ‘30s: Coalface (1935), Man of Aran (1934), Song of Ceylon (1934). Here was a plucky solidarity forged in the white heat of want and war and burgeoning welfarism.
Four decades later, it is revealing to compare Celia's grief over suddenly losing her serviceman husband with Iris suddenly losing her mother in Under the Skin (1997). Celia's dignified stoicism in Millions Like Us has become the model for depictions of grief in British films. Viewed objectively and in high bright light as she sheds a tear before being swept along by the communal spirit, Celia manifests a very British stiff upper lip before adversity.
Carrying the film around with her like an incendiary device, Iris seems to write her sadness, anger, and desire into every shot. This film's adventurous depiction of feelings finds social realism looking away from the documentary realist consensus that had dominated postwar ideas about British cinema, and toward our cinema's art school wing typified by Nicolas Roeg and, more recently, Sally Potter (Orlando, 1992) and John Maybury (Love Is the Devil, 1998). Influenced by Wong-Kar-Wai, Adler imported an aesthetic abandon of dizzy hand-held camerawork, jump cuts, slow motion and ‘bad' focus orchestrated with Massive Attack and The Aloof on the soundtrack. As Iris leaves Rose' house, having tried to seduce her brother-in-law and hung over on their Scotch, the smeared streetlight and fragmented words and music in her head recall an avant-garde film. Seeking to assert herself, or find a less painful way to be, Iris dons her mother's clinical wig, a fur coat and cheap sunglasses and goes looking for sex, finding only violent debasement. Shot on 16mm on Merseyside locations, clubs, tatty bedsits, and vandalized phone booths become symptoms of contemporary social breakdown. There is no common ground anymore, only empty places. As Mother's coffin passes into the oven, Iris describes a sexual encounter in graphic detail. But this is no attempt to affront death by asserting the sensual. And Iris seeks to lose herself not, as Celia has, in a public commonwealth, but by displacing her feelings, becoming an object in a crowd. Dressed like a provincial parody of an upmarket whore, the daughter Iris was becomes as unrecognizable as the ashes she picks up from the crematorium. This orphan gets a job in a lost property office. She dreams that an abandoned mobile rings. It is Mother calling her. Then Mother appears, wraithlike amongst the filing shelves, Rita Tushingham's quiet self-effacing performance recalling the waif she portrayed in the '60s New Wave films that first warned of the end of Britain‘s wartime status quo. As open-ended as it is nonjudgmental, Under the Skin finishes as Iris sings at a club, unsure as yet whether this is her true vocation. It is perhaps a measure of the decline of community in postwar Britain, as well as symptomatic of Iris' uncertain identity, that she seems to be trying her voice out rather than coherently singing the woman's hurt that is every club singer's stock in trade. If her voice sounds shaky alongside Celia's, it is because British social realism, incredibly, is still only exploring the possibilities of female experience.
At Hortense's adoptive mother's funeral, the actors' credits pass by over a long shot of the congregation. All are singing a hymn, except for the pensive Hortense. The dirge-like tone of Andrew Dickson's score suits Leigh's portrait of a society stopped dead by emotional paralysis. Far from the "make do and mend" ethos of Millions Like Us, Britain has declined into a society of atomized and conflicted souls, bent on hungrily experiencing their lives but unable to talk about it. Hortense's need to discover and seek out her biological mother may seem a risky, or even odd, thing to do. Part of the mysterious process of grieving, perhaps. But in principle, Leigh says, the search for a sense of continuity with others is vital in a society so fractured. Like the best of British films, Secrets and Lies is not only about individuals. It is about Us. This is what makes British cinema distinctive. In an early scene, Maurice, a professional photographer, tries to get a series of clients to smile for the camera. Before his lens pass newly marrieds, a Chinese nurse, a Greek couple, dog lovers, cat lovers, an Indian about to return to the old country to be married : a veritable potpourri of what Britain has become. Any Briton watching can surely identify with someone here, and we find ourselves smiling along with these people. By putting the whole society in the frame, as it were, Leigh has succeeded in addressing his British audience in a way in which Hollywood films never do. In so many ways, Secrets and Lies charts a progression from the lonely individual Hortense at the funeral, Cynthia at home to the collective at Roxanne's party. Always a principle of cohesion, the generous and avuncular Maurice seems condemned for much of the film to the task of getting people to smile in the bleak moment of a photograph, when not attempting to connect with his childless frustrated wife. As the funeral sees the cast names "passing through this life" at the bottom of the frame, as it were, cinematographer Dick Pope shoots Hortense and Cynthia's meeting at Holborn tube station through passing traffic. It is a moment when strangers stop, briefly acknowledging each other amid the tumult. As on other occasions in British films, the director toys with those moments when we are embarrassed yet curious about private exchanges in public places. "Will you get inside!" hisses Roxanne to her mother as Cynthia bawls down the street after her. Later, Maurice implores Roxanne at a bus shelter to return to the house and meet her half-sister and try to reconcile with her mother following Cynthia's revelation about Hortense. Leigh's is a film committed to the reconciliation of individual with individual, the public and the private. We have come a long way from the easy consolations of state-sponsored realism. It is a measure of how far we are from the cradle of the postwar Welfare State that Lesley Manville's superbly rendered social worker wants to help Hortense but finds herself so pushed by a growing caseload that she can give Hortense no more than her lunch hour. In a film in which everyone labours under some sense of regret, Britain searches for a sense of connectedness. Few recent British films have so fluently, so poignantly and amusingly, described contemporary Britons' attempts to overcome the shock of otherness.
But stifled subjectivity has its price. "I'm sick of your stupid moods. What's wrong with you? What do you want, a planet of your own?" Lanna (Kathleen McDermott) chides Morvern as they sit, lost on a dirt road somewhere in Spain. We then see Morvern in a lone phone booth, the Spanish sun setting behind her and to the right of the frame. If Celia is at the centre of the frame in the canteen, Morvern inhabits the outskirts of the film, just as she inhabits the outskirts of this life. She fled to Spain on the kind of booze 'n' sex binge that drives thousands of 20-something Brits to the accommodation machines and rave clubs of the Costa del Sol. Indeed, British youth was recently described as the most drunken and promiscuous in Europe, contributing to a growing foreign perception of pasty-faced repressives itching to touch down and hit the Sangria. But when Morvern gets there the ravenous coupling and solipsistic pleasure-seeking puts her own mental departure in context. This break does not take Morvern "out of herself." It reiterates everyone's isolation. August 2004 | Issue 45 ACCESS: Millions Like Us is available on VHS from Facets. Secrets and Lies, Under the Skin, and Morvern Callar can be had on VHS and DVD at the usual sources. ALSO: More reviews |
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