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The Go-Between

United Kingdom

1970

118 Min
Color
1.85:1
English
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
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DIR Joseph Losey

EXEC Robert Velaise

PROD John Heyman, Norman Priggen, Denis Johnson

SCR Harold Pinter, L.P. Hartley

DP Gerry Fisher

CAST Julie Christie, Alan Bates, Margaret Leighton, Michael Redgrave, Dominic Guard, Michael Gough, Edward Fox, Richard Gibson, Simon Hume-Kendall

ED Reginald Beck

PROD DES Carmen Dillon

MUSIC Michel Legrand

Cannes (In Competition): Grand Prix du Festival International du Film

Synopsis

Summer 1900: Queen Victoria’s last and the summer Leo turns 13. He’s the guest of Marcus, a wealthy classmate, at a grand home in rural Norfolk. Leo is befriended by Marian, Marcus’s twenty-something sister, a beauty about to be engaged to Hugh, a viscount and good fellow. Marian buys Leo a forest-green suit, takes him on walks, and asks him to carry messages to and from their neighbor, Ted Burgess, a bit of a rake. Leo is soon dissembling, realizes he’s betraying Hugh, but continues as the go-between nonetheless, asking adults naive questions about the attractions of men and women. Can an affair between neighbors stay secret for long? And how does innocence end? –IMDb

Director

Original

Joseph Losey

Joseph Walton Losey (January 14, 1909, La Crosse, Wisconsin – June 22, 1984, London) was an American theater and film director. After studying in Germany with Bertolt Brecht, Losey returned to the United States, eventually making his way to Hollywood.

While in Hollywood, Losey co-directed the original U.S. production of Galileo, by Brecht, with Brecht himself as the other co-director. Charles Laughton, who had worked with Brecht on the translation / adaptation, performed the lead role. In the context of that production, Losey also made a half hour film based on Galileo’s life.

During the McCarthy Era, Losey was investigated for his supposed ties with the Communist Party and was blacklisted by the Hollywood movie studio bosses. His career in shambles, he moved to London, where he continued working as a director.

Even in the UK, he experienced problems: his first British film, The Sleeping Tiger, a 1954 film noir crime thriller, bore the pseudonym Victor Hanbury… read more

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rischka

26Mar13

oh god alan bates in this movie _swoon_

Owen Sound likes this

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pixienat

12Sep12

Two years in a row I am Julie Christie for Halloween. SUP

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StevO

30Aug12

The movie succeeds excellently in describing the Victorian Era, still IMHO it's a shame this movie has won the highest award in Cannes 1971 rather than Loves of Blonde by M Forman

  • Picture of pixienat

    pixienat

    12Sep12

    DISLIKE. ALSO it's the EDWARDIAN ERA not the "Victorian" era.

  • Picture of StevO

    StevO

    2Dec12

    You are 1,000 times right on the era! But you know class segregation and well mannered hypocrisy are such constants through English history I find it hard to tell which era is which!

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lauli

31Oct11

A very nice film, though it falls a bit short of the novel, which is just wonderful.

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