Released Date:
1989-02-17
Languages:
English
Countries:
UK, West Germany
Runtime:
85 min
Rated:
PG-13
IMDB Ratings:
7.5 (2186 Reviews)
Director:
Terence DaviesGenres:
DramaThe second film in Terence Davies's autobiographical series ('Trilogy', 'The Long Day Closes') is an impressionistic view of a working-class family in 1940s and 1950s Liverpool, based on Davies's own family. The first part, 'Distant Voices', opens with grown siblings Eileen (Angela Walsh), Maisie (Lorraine Ashbourne) and Tony (Dean Williams), and their mother (Freda Dowie) arranged in mourning clothes before the photograph of their smiling father (Pete Postlethwaite). Soon after, the family poses in a similar tableau, but for a happier occasion - Eileen's wedding. While relatives sing at her reception, Eileen hysterically grieves for her dad, and recalls happy times of her youth. Tony and Maisie's memories, however, are more troubled. Davies intermingles and contrasts scenes like the family peacefully lighting candles in church with the brutal man beating his wife and terrorizing his young children. In 'Still Lives', set (and filmed) two years later, the siblings are settled in life, but not all happily. For Eileen, relief from her drab existence comes only when singing at the pub. With his skillfully composed frames and evocative use of music in place of dialogue, Davies creates a lovely, affecting photo album of a troubled family wrestling with the complexity of love.
Released Date:
1993-05-28
Languages:
English
Countries:
UK
Runtime:
85 min
Rated:
PG
IMDB Ratings:
7.4 (1541 Reviews)
Director:
Terence DaviesThe Long Day Closes is the story of eleven-year-old "Bud." A sad and lonely boy, Bud struggles through his days. With cinema as his main source of solace, he haunts the local movie-house. All the while, his family looms large in our peripheral vision as do the menacing bullies of his school, but Bud is the center of attention both from the camera's angle and from his doting family. With a gray background, the film fuses clips and audio from classic movies into Bud's dreary childhood and brings it to life with an elegance Bach would bring to your home movies. The overall effect is a montage of memory which seems to ignite flashes of recognition in the viewer.
Released Date:
1996-03-01
Languages:
English
Countries:
UK
Runtime:
91 min
IMDB Ratings:
6.1 (589 Reviews)
Director:
Terence DaviesGenres:
DramaTerence Davies
John Kennedy Toole (novel)
While on a train, a teenage boy thinks about his life and the flamboyant aunt whose friendship acted as an emotional shield from his troubled family. This film evokes the haunting quality of memory while creating a heartfelt portrait of a boy's life in a rural 1940s Southern town.
Released Date:
2001-03-07
Languages:
English, French
Countries:
UK, France, Germany, USA
Runtime:
135 min
Rated:
PG
IMDB Ratings:
7.1 (6075 Reviews)
Director:
Terence DaviesEdith Wharton (novel)
Terence Davies
Terence Davies' The House of Mirth is a tragic love story set against a background of wealth and social hypocrisy in turn of the century New York. Lily Bart is a ravishing socialite at the height of her success who quickly discovers the precariousness of her position when her beauty and charm start attracting unwelcome interest and jealousy. Torn between her heart and her head, Lilly always seems to do the right thing at the wrong time. She seeks a wealthy husband and in trying to conform to social expectations, she misses her chance for real love with Lawrence Selden.
Released Date:
2001-03-07
Languages:
English, French
Countries:
UK, USA, France, Germany
Runtime:
135 min
Rated:
PG
IMDB Ratings:
7.1 (6089 Reviews)
Director:
Terence DaviesEdith Wharton (novel)
Terence Davies
Terence Davies' The House of Mirth is a tragic love story set against a background of wealth and social hypocrisy in turn of the century New York. Lily Bart is a ravishing socialite at the height of her success who quickly discovers the precariousness of her position when her beauty and charm start attracting unwelcome interest and jealousy. Torn between her heart and her head, Lilly always seems to do the right thing at the wrong time. She seeks a wealthy husband and in trying to conform to social expectations, she misses her chance for real love with Lawrence Selden.
Released Date:
2008-10-31
Languages:
English
Countries:
UK
Runtime:
74 min
IMDB Ratings:
7.2 (1460 Reviews)
Director:
Terence DaviesTerence Davies (1945- ), filmmaker and writer, takes us, sometimes obliquely, to his childhood and youth in Liverpool. He's born Catholic and poor; later he rejects religion. He discovers homo-eroticism, and it's tinged with Catholic guilt. Enjoying pop music gives way to a teenage love of Mahler and Wagner. Using archival footage, we take a ferry to a day on the beach. Postwar prosperity brings some positive change, but its concrete architecture is dispiriting. Contemporary colors and sights of children playing may balance out the presence of unemployment and persistent poverty. Davies' narration is a mix of his own reflections and the poems and prose of others.
Released Date:
2011-11-25
Languages:
English
Countries:
USA, UK
Runtime:
98 min
Rated:
R
IMDB Ratings:
6.3 (10485 Reviews)
Director:
Terence DaviesTerence Davies (adaptation)
Terence Rattigan (play)
The wife of a British Judge is caught in a self-destructive love affair with a Royal Air Force pilot.
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