British director Ken Russell started out training for a naval career, but after wartime RAF and merchant navy service he switched goals and went into ballet. Supplementing his dancing income as an actor and still photographer, Russell put together a handful of amateur films in the 50s before being hired as a staff director by the BBC. Russell made a name for himself (albeit a name not always spoken in reverence) during the first half of the ‘60s by directing a series of iconoclastic TV dramatizations of the lives of famous composers and dancers. And if he felt that the facts were getting in the way of his story, he’d make up his own — frequently bordering on the libelous. If he had any respect for the famous persons whose lives he probed, it was secondary to his fascination with revealing all warts and open wounds.
A film director since 1963, Russell burst into the international consciousness with 1969’s Women in Love, a hothouse version of the D.H. Lawrence novel. No director… read more
No one really captures the pastoral tranquillity of the English countryside quite like Ken Russell. Even though this particular film lacks some of the exuberance and eccentricity of his more iconic films - like the related Women in Love - I still found it to be a mostly enjoyable and entertaining character study, with some extraordinary and unforgettable scenes.
Tepid Russell, lacking the flinty resonance of the earlier Women in Love. Pictorially pleasant, but with a script that reveal little other than thumping Lawrentian symbolism. A rather irritating lead performance doesn’t help.
The British director was 84.