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Underground

United Kingdom

1928

84 Min
Black and White
1.33:1
English
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
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DIR Anthony Asquith

SCR Anthony Asquith

DP Stanley Rodwell

CAST Elissa Landi, Brian Aherne, Norah Baring, Cyril McLaglen

London (London Archive Gala)

Synopsis

Passions run deeper than the Northern Line in Anthony Asquith’s tale of love, jealousy, treachery and murder on the London Underground. Eighty years later, your average tube ride might not be quite as eventful, but anyone who has exploited the city’s public transport system to romantic advantage will find much to recognise. Restored by the BFI National Archive and presented with a live performance of Neil Brand’s new score by the Prima Vista Social Club, Asquith’s working-class love story is one of the great British silent feature films. It’s also one of the great films about the capital – a journey through the Underground (many of the scenes were filmed at Waterloo) via old London boozers and open-topped buses to a climactic chase through Lots Road power station that magnificently reveals the smoking roofscape of the coal-fuelled city. In the late 1920s Asquith, along with Hitchcock, was one of the most audacious young talents working in British film. At the age of only 26 he demonstrates an assured and spare style with some remarkably cinematic flourishes clearly inspired by contemporary German and Russian filmmakers. For many years restoration of Underground presented insurmountable difficulties. With recent developments in digital technology available to the BFI’s film restoration team we have now been able to make a significant improvement to the surviving film elements. —bfi

Director

Original

Anthony Asquith

For two decades, Anthony Asquith was — along with Alfred Hitchcock, David Lean, and Carol Reed — one of the most internationally successful filmmakers to come out of England. So much of his career was spent adapting plays to the screen, however, that his critical recognition was somewhat limited in his own lifetime and for many years after, and it was only in the 21st century that his movies began getting the respect they deserved. Born in 1902, Asquith was the youngest child of Herbert Henry Asquith (1852-1928), who served as British prime minister from 1908 to 1916. Anthony Asquith was known to friends by the nickname “Puffin,” given him by his mother. He had an avid interest in music as a boy, but conceded a severe lack of talent as a musician; in its place, he discovered the emerging new art of cinema, which fascinated him. As a young man, Asquith, in turn, played a pivotal but indirect role in the development of motion picture arts in England by co-founding the London Film Society… read more

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Untitled

By adam on October 26, 2009

I was at the British Premiere of the recent BFI restoration of this previously “lost” classic just a few days ago. Its a wonderful film, and proof that the British film industry was actually relevant…  read review

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