Remembrance (1982 film)

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Remembrance
Film poster
Directed byColin Gregg
Written byHugh Stoddart
Produced byColin Gregg
StarringJohn Altman
Martin Barrass
David John
Pete Lee-Wilson
Gary Oldman
Ewan Stewart
Nick Dunning
Al Hunter Ashton
Dicken Ashworth
Derek Benfield[1]
CinematographyJohn Metcalfe
Edited byPeter Delfgou
Distributed byChannel Four Films
Release date
  • November 10, 1982 (1982-11-10)
Running time
130 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget£325,000[2]

Remembrance is a British ensemble drama about Royal Navy ratings of HMS Raleigh, who are about to embark on a six-month naval exercise. The film is noteworthy for early appearances of several well-known British actors, including Timothy Spall, Lisa Maxwell and John Altman and Gary Oldman in his film debut.[3][4] It was an early production from Channel Four Films and was shown on 10 November 1982 on Channel 4.[5] It was also one of the first films in the UK to be shown on television less than three years after its initial cinema release (a delay enforced at the time by the Cinema Exhibitors' Association).[6]

Plot[edit]

The film does not have a simple plot, but rather cuts between the interweaving stories of several characters, as they prepare for the coming months away at sea. The action centres around the bars and clubs of the Union Street district of Plymouth. One major event that affects all the characters is the hospitalisation and eventual death of Daniel (Gary Oldman) after a violent assault by a nightclub bouncer.

Production[edit]

Gregg got the idea for the film from his own experiences as a student at Plymouth Art College.[7] It was largely shot on location, including interior scenes in two Union Street pubs, The Phoenix and The Two Trees[5].

The film was commissioned by Channel 4, before the channel had started broadcasting and was aired in the first week of the new channel[5] in early November 1982, close to Remembrance Sunday.[7]

Unusually for the time, the film had been given a cinema preview in June 1982 at the Screen on the Hill cinema in Hampstead.[8] This was a purely opportunistic enterprise, taking advantage of the prominent role that the Royal Navy had played in the Falklands War to gain publicity for the film (and the upcoming launch of Channel 4), but it turned out to be a significant event in the relationship between cinema and television in the UK. In Independent Television in Britain (Volume 6, 2003),[6] Paul Bonner and Lesley Aston note that:

With historical perspective this can be seen as a pivotal point in the relationship between cinema and television [...] In the following two years Justin Dukes' formidable negotiating skills were brought to bear on the restrictive practice by the Cinema Exhibitors' Association of preventing any film for cinema showing being shown on television for three years after its release [...] Dukes argued that... if the films could not be shown on television when the channel which had paid for all or part of their cost... then they would not get made. He was successful in getting the embargo lifted for films costing less than £1.25 million (later this was to rise to £2 million). It was a major step forward for the channel and, as it was to turn out, for the cinema industry also.

Cast[edit]

Soundtrack[edit]

The film uses Aragon by Brian Eno as incidental music.

Reception[edit]

Channel 4's regulator, the Independent Broadcasting Authority (IBA), raised concerns about gratuitous use of swearing in the script.[9] The film won the Golden Charybdis Award at the 1982 Taormina International Film Festival.[10]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Remembrance (1982)".
  2. ^ BRITISH PRODUCTION 1981 Moses, Antoinette. Sight and Sound; London Vol. 51, Iss. 4, (Fall 1982): 258.
  3. ^ Becquart, Charlotte (2017-10-25). "When Gary Oldman launched his career on the Torpoint Ferry". cornwalllive. Retrieved 2018-02-12.
  4. ^ "Film4 - Articles - Gary Oldman Season on Film4 - All 4". www.channel4.com. Retrieved 2018-02-12.
  5. ^ a b c "Plymouth's Union Street was inspiration for 1980s film". plymouthherald. 2017-10-31. Retrieved 2018-02-18.
  6. ^ a b Bonner, P.; Aston, L. (2002-12-13). Independent Television in Britain: Volume 6 New Developments in Independent Television 1981-92: Channel 4, TV-am, Cable and Satellite. Springer. p. 197. ISBN 9780230287136.
  7. ^ a b "Long lost movie filmed in Plymouth launched Hollywood careers". plymouthherald. 2017-10-23. Retrieved 2018-02-18.
  8. ^ Hill, Derek (16 January 2013). "Interview with Derek Hill, film buyer at Channel 4, 1981-1994" (PDF). British Universities Film & Video Council. Retrieved 18 February 2018.
  9. ^ Bonner, P.; Aston, L. (2002-12-13). Independent Television in Britain: Volume 6 New Developments in Independent Television 1981-92: Channel 4, TV-am, Cable and Satellite. Springer. p. 124. ISBN 9780230287136.
  10. ^ Bonner, P.; Aston, L. (2002-12-13). Independent Television in Britain: Volume 6 New Developments in Independent Television 1981-92: Channel 4, TV-am, Cable and Satellite. Springer. p. 102. ISBN 9780230287136.

External links[edit]