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Brief Encounter
Category Romance
All Genres: Romance, Drama
Year: 1945
Country: UK
Runtime: 86 minutes
Languages: English
Director: David Lean
Sound: Mono
Taglines:
  • A story of the most precious moments in woman's life!
  • Writing by: Noel Coward - (play "Still Life") uncredited
    Anthony Havelock-Allan - uncredited
    David Lean - uncredited
    Ronald Neame - uncredited
    Produced by: Noel Coward - producer
    Anthony Havelock-Allan - producer (uncredited)
    Ronald Neame - producer (uncredited)
    Cast: Celia Johnson - Laura Jesson
    Trevor Howard - Dr. Alec Harvey
    Stanley Holloway - Albert Godby
    Joyce Carey - Myrtle Bagot
    Cyril Raymond - Fred Jesson
    Everley Gregg - Dolly Messiter
    Marjorie Mars - Mary Norton
    Margaret Barton - Beryl Walters, Tea Room Assistant
    Wilfred Babbage - Policeman at War Memorial (uncredited)
    Alfie Bass - Waiter at the Royal (uncredited)
    Wallace Bosco - Doctor at Bobbie's Accident (uncredited)
    Official Website: Visit Website
     
    Plot Outline:
    Meeting a stranger in a railway station, a woman is tempted to cheat on her husband.
     
    Plot:
    On a cafe at a railway station, housewife Laura Jesson meets doctor Alec Harvey. Although they are already married, they gradually fall in love with each other. They continue to meet every Thursday on the small cafe, although they know that their love is impossible.



    An excellent, charming, moving film., 22 November 2000
    10/10
    Author: Lloyd-23 from Newcastle, Blighty

    Have you really never seen Brief Encounter? What have you been doing all these years? You have a treat in store.

    I have a great love for British films of the 1940s. There seems to have been a great flowering of creative talent then, and the films of the period look beautiful, and have such wonderful characters in them. David Lean is more famous for his huge Technicolor epics, like Lawrence of Arabia, or A Passage to India, but Brief Encounter is his most moving film. It is shot in atmospheric black and white, and tells the story of two people who fall in love, in mundane little England.

    Celia Johnston plays Laura, a middle class woman who lives a happy but predictable life, who meets Dr. Alec Harvey, played by craggy Trevor Howard. There starts a doomed love affair, set to the sweeping romantic sounds of Rachmaninov's 2nd piano concerto. This single piece of music plays throughout the film, and stirs up exactly the right emotions. The film will make you want to own a recording of the music.

    Such is the power and influence of this film, that it has been remade a few times, and spoofed on countless occasions. It created the archetype for the romantic farewell on a station platform, with steam hissing from trains, and an orchestra playing in the background. Though this has been copied often, it has never been bettered. The film involves a few scenes on railway platforms, and some of these are mundane, others joyous, or despairing, wretched. The director uses many deft tricks to heighten the emotion all along the way. A simple tilt of the camera, or contrasting mood of another character, serves to add tremendous power to the emotion of the scenes.

    Times were different then. People were brasher, accents were stronger, and social attitudes to affairs quite different. The period of the film gives it much of its charm. It does not make it a cold study of a different culture, however. The film is very personal. The character of Laura's husband is hardly seen in the entire film, which means that we identify more with Laura's feelings. We see the affair and next to nothing else.

    Celia Johnson brings a great deal to the film. She is so likeable, and so able to express the misery that her new love brings her. Her manner of speaking is quite alien to a modern ear. In the 1940s, it was quite normal to add a Y sound to many words. "Hat" became "hyat". The accents are not forced, though - they come across as quite natural, and very likeable.

    This film would not be made this way today. The modern audience would demand younger stars, and nudity. See this film to witness how it was once possible to make films about love without bedroom scenes. Brief Encounter is very much stronger for lack of these. Stoicism and restraint are under-rated traits in modern cinema. Modern directors and writers would do well to remind themselves with this film, that a story can be given tremendous emotional power by techniques which seem to have been lost.


    Movie Quotes: Laura Jesson: It's awfully easy to lie when you know that you're trusted implicitly. So very easy, and so very degrading.
    Crazy Credits:: We know about 1 Crazy Credits. One of them reads:
    There is a credit in Rising Sun thanking "The MIT Leg Lab" and "Marc Raibert and his Running Team." This refers to a short scene where the two detectives go out to a fancy-looking research lab (really a water treatment plant; also used as the set for Starfleet Academy on the TV series "Star Trek - The Next Generation). In the background of some of the shots there are two legged robots: one hopping in a circle in a tea-house; the other bouncing up a garden path.    These robots are actually academic research projects from the MIT AI Lab's Legged Locomotion Lab. They really do hop about and maintain their balance. Power comes from off-board hydraulic pumps (hence the guy in the background (me!) pulling hoses for the robot), and body attitude is sensed with gyroscopes. A human with a joystick tells the robot what direction to go, and the control algorithms (which are the real subject of Leg Lab research) maintain speed, direction, and balance.    However, the robots aren't designed for special effects. They're always being modified, and they tend to break down frequently. This made shooting in the hot july sun of the San Fernando Valley a real nightmare, with transputers crashing in the heat, stuck gyros, and hydraulic leaks.    Three grad students and a professor worked steadily for about a month before Hollywood, and then five days on the set and on location to get the robots in about 15 seconds of film. The credits are: Marc Raibert (our prof), and Charles Francois, Rob Playter and Lee Campbell (me) who are students. We three students appear in the film in white lab coats acting like Robot Scientists!!
    Goofs: We know about 4 goofs. Here comes one of them:
    Continuity: Laura runs through a downpour but is dry when she walks into the refreshment room.
    Trivia: There are 8 entries in the trivia list - like these:
    • Carnforth station was chosen partly because it was so far from the South East of England that it would receive sufficient warning of an air-raid attack that there would be time to turn out the filming lights to comply with wartime blackout restrictions.
    • On initial release, the film was banned by the strict censorship board in Ireland on the grounds that it portrayed an adulterer in a sympathetic light.
    • The first choice for the Doctor Alec Harvey had been Roger Livesey, but when David Lean and Anthony Havelock-Allan saw Trevor Howard, in a rough cut of The Way to the Stars (1945) they decided to offer the part to Trevor Howard, who at that time was an unknown actor, who had been invalided out of the army.
    Rating:
    8.30/10 ( 8735 Votes )
    Hits: 161
    Trailer: 0 Reviews: 0 Comments: 0
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