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In Celebration

United Kingdom, United States

1975

131 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
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DIR Lindsay Anderson

EXEC Otto Plaschkes

PROD Ely A. Landau, Les Landau

SCR David Storey

DP Dick Bush

CAST Alan Bates, Brian Cox, Gabrielle Daye, Bill Owen, James Bolam, Constance Chapman

ED Russell Lloyd

PROD DES Alan Withy

MUSIC Christopher Gunning

SOUND Bruce White

Synopsis

In a Yorkshire mining town, three educated brothers return to their blue-collar home to celebrate the 40th wedding anniversary of their parents, but dark secrets come to the fore. —IMDb

Director

Original

Lindsay Anderson

Lindsay Gordon Anderson (17 April 1923 – 30 August 1994) was an Indian-born English feature film, theatre and documentary director, film critic, and leading light of the Free Cinema movement and the British New Wave. He is most widely remembered for his 1968 film if…., which won the Grand Prix at Cannes Film Festival.

Of English and Scottish descent, Anderson was the son of a British Army officer. he was born in Bangalore, South India, and educated at the independent Saint Ronan’s School in Worthing, West Sussex (before 1974 simply known as Sussex), and at Cheltenham College in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, where he met his lifelong friend and biographer, the screenwriter and novelist Gavin Lambert; Wadham College, Oxford, where he studied classics; and Magdalen College, Oxford where he studied English literature.

After graduating, Anderson worked for the final year of World War II as a cryptographer for the Intelligence Corps, at the Wireless Experimental Centre in Delhi… read more

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Noiresque

16Jul11

A great film about the moral experience of the first generation of university-education, scholarship children of the Twentieth Century working class parents..

Picture of Noiresque

Noiresque

16Jul11

One of my favourite films, revealing so much about the experience of the first generation of university-educated, scholarship children of working and underclass parents from the mid-late 20th century. My father relates so much to the Alan Bates character.

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