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Saturday Night And Sunday Morning [DVD] [1960]
 
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Saturday Night And Sunday Morning [DVD] [1960]

Albert Finney , Shirley Anne Field , Karel Reisz    Parental Guidance   DVD
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Actors: Albert Finney, Shirley Anne Field, Hylda Baker, Rachel Roberts, Peter Sallis
  • Directors: Karel Reisz
  • Format: PAL, Import
  • Language English
  • Subtitles: Czech
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: PG
  • Run Time: 86 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B004IIT7AY
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 54,037 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Brand New & Factory Sealed in a SLIM case. Region 2 PAL (UK & Europe). IMPORTANT: This is the official Czech release. The front cover is exactly as pictured and the back cover has Czech text. The film itself has optional Czech subtitles on/off. ORIGINAL ENGLISH SOUNDTRACK - GUARANTEED > > > > > Starring Albert Finney, Shirley Anne Field and Rachel Roberts. In the industrial streets and factories of Nottingham, Arthur Seaton (Albert Finney) spends his days at the factory bench, his evenings in the local pubs and his nights in the arms of Brenda (Rachel Roberts), the wife of a fellow factory worker. Irresistibly handsome and brimming with animal vitality, Arthur is anti-authority and unashamedly amoral. Based on Alan Sillitoe's largely autobiographical novel, and with powerful central performances, crackling dialogue and a superb jazz score by Johnny Dankworth, the film stands as a vibrant modern classic. This Seminal film of the British New Wave was a great box-office success - audiences were thrilled by its anti-establishment energy, gritty realism, and above all its fresh, outspoken working-class hero...


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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
33 of 34 people found the following review helpful
By Mark Barry, Reckless Records, London HALL OF FAME TOP 50 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Blu-ray
After viewing this unashamedly gritty portrayal of British working class life on BLU RAY, you're left with two distinct impressions - one is admiration for the extraordinary restoration work done by the BRITISH FILM INSTITUTE on the newly restored near-faultless print - and second - and more importantly - is sheer astonishment at what a truly fantastic and ballsy film "Saturday Night And Sunday Morning" is.

In 2009 - with our so-called freedom and enlightenment - you'd be hard-pressed to find a movie so darkly truthful and still relevant. Masterpiece is a word that is often overused, but in this case it genuinely applies.

Directed by Karel Reisz in 1960, it was produced by Tony Richardson (who directed "The Loneliness of The Long Distance Runner") and adapted and scripted from his own novel by Alan Sillitoe. Set in Northern England, this is a world of downing pints of mild and bitter until you're paralytic drunk, red phone booths with black A/B coin boxes in them, kids getting a bag of Dolly Mixtures sweets in the corner shop, push-up packets of Sweet Afton cigarettes, kettles that boil by whistling because they're on a gas stove and not in an electric socket where they'd bubble, busy bodies with scarves on their heads watching with malicious eyes from tenement doorways for neighbours doing anything immoral...

A young Albert Finney plays defiant loudmouth Arthur Seaton who suffers the late 1950's Nottingham factory all day, because at night and at weekends, he can have his "fun". In his dapper suit and greased-back hair, Arthur is busy juggling another man's wife, drinking and betting. Finney isn't just good in the part, he's magnificent - he inhabits every scene like a panther about to pounce - like the world owes him a favour and his character Arthur clearly believes it does (his anthem above is spoken in the opening credits as he wipes his hands in a rag by the machine-tool lathe). The script is funny, ultra-realistic and dangerous all of the time. The scene where Finney arrives back from work and tells his mesmerized vegitating dad sat in an armchair in front of the gogglebox again that a man lost an eye because he watched too much television - elicits the half-dead response "aye son" - is both funny and poignant at the same time.

Having said that, watching the movie again, you're more struck by the women whose parts were cutting edge for the time - given real meat to work with. Shirley Ann Field isn't just a pretty face as Doreen the girl who makes hairnets and lives at home with her mum; she adds a rare intelligence and class to the movie. Hylda Baker is excellent as the convivial Aunt Ada who thinks Arthur is a lovely boy, but it's Rachel Roberts as the smitten wife Brenda who nicks the film - she is needy one moment, steely determined the next - then towards the end, she's just beaten and broken and lowered down as she realizes Arthur's heart is going somewhere else - permanently.

Johnny Dankworth's jazz soundtrack is deceptive - it seems like fun at first, but mostly it acts as an almost sly and sinister backdrop - happy tunes for people with nowhere to go - for the rest of their lives... It's very, very effective.

But your eyes keep coming back to the print - apart from a few lines in the opening shot of the noisy factory floor, the stark black and white footage is consistently fantastic - you can see Rachel's face blusher, Finney's sweat in the pub as he watches a war-veteran drown his sorrow in beer (Peter Sallis - the voice of Wallace in Wallace & Gromit - has a bit part in that scene) even feel the soft texture of Doreen's cashmere cardigans...a stunning restoration job done from start to finish.

The 4 extras are a mixed bag of the great and the disappointing:
1. A commentary for the duration of the film, which you can have On or Off.
2. There's an extract of an interview with Albert Finney taped in 1982 at the National Film Theatre (hosted by Michael Billington), which is accompanied by stills from the film. It's witty and informative in some ways, but criminally short at about 6 minutes. Being the main star, it's very disappointing to not hear more from him. Far better is...
3. An interview with Shirley Ann Field, which is superlative. She reminisces about each of the actors, her naivety at the time of filming, how groundbreaking the subject matter was - and of course from the stills - you get to see how beautiful she was and still is - a class act - much like Finney himself.
4. Best, however, is "We Are The Lambeth Boys", a documentary film about youths at work and play. It centres on the "Alford House Youth Club" and like the film is fully restored too. It uses the same Woodfall film team - Reisz as Director, Walter Lassally the camerman and even has Johnny Dankworth's jazzy music. It's a fascinating and lengthy insight into a world of British youth that is gone forever.

"Saturday Night And Sunday Morning" is a balls-to-the-wall triumph on Blu Ray - it's just such a shame that the mighty Albert Finney didn't get more involved - it would have been such sweet icing to an already great piece of cake.

Recommended - big time.

PS: the BFI have also done "The Loneliness Of The Long Distance Runner" (see REVIEW) and astonishing restorations of Stanley Baker's "Zulu" and Michael Caine's "The Italian Job" (see REVIEW)....
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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD|Amazon Verified Purchase
It's really great to see this classic film available again. It seems to appear and disappear in the BFI catalogues periodically and, though I owned the original VHS release, I missed its last appearance on DVD. It had been some years, then, since I had last watched it but, having seen it again recently, I can say that it is still as superb an example of post-war British cinema as I've seen.

Sillitoe's - and Finney's - Arthur Seaton really captures the mood of much of Britain's working class youth at the time; the fifties and early sixties were a period of relative prosperity, a stark contrast to the privations of the war and its immediate aftermath. There was a complementary liberalisation in social mores to some degree as well, much as had happened during and after the First World War; soldiers returned from the various battle zones with new ideas; the influx of American troops also introduced new concepts - and women and their status began to be viewed differently, by society at large and by women themselves. At the same time, although Seaton is part of this, he hasn't had access to the ideas and education for him to make sense of the changing world and his part in it - he makes flip references to the `Reds' and the Communist Party, but he isn't engaged with politics in anything more than a superficial sense; his comments seem more designed to shock those who steadfastly follow the established order of things.

The boom in consumer goods hasn't filtered down to Arthur's social sphere yet either - he works hard and he has money in his pocket, more money than many of his workmates but his only outlet is booze and sex, which he finds readily available. Caught in a transitional period, he's a peculiarly British `rebel without a cause' and is ready to rail at any perceived authority without a clear idea why. In the course of the film, he has some rude awakenings and some harsh truths to face - I'm not sure myself whether he has learnt as much as he needs to by the end of the movie to make the rest of his life a less bumpy ride, but the ending is open enough for everyone to have their own take on that.

Reisz's direction captures not just the energy of Arthur's world but also the loyalties and tensions - in both the family and in the neighbourhood - that hold it all together; Hylda Baker turns in a sterling performance as Arthur's aunt, a reminder of her fine acting skills for those who only know her later comedy work. Rachel Roberts also stands out as his one-time love interest; it's a more convincing characterisation than Shirley Anne Field perhaps, whose character replaces her in Arthur's affections - at the same time, the contrast between the two women is nicely marked and Field's Doreen has a charm of her own that's hard to put your finger on. In truth the whole cast is well chosen and there are several actors whose faces are probably more familiar than their names would be, all of whom contribute to the success of the film.

With Arthur's story surrounded by the legendary Johnny Dankworth's atmospheric jazz score, this really is a classic of British New Wave cinema and still remains one of the best films - in my opinion - that Britain has produced. A five star recommendation without a shadow of a doubt.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
By FAMOUS NAME VINE™ VOICE
Format:DVD|Amazon Verified Purchase
'Saturday Night And Sunday Morning' has to be one of the all-time greats from the 1960s.

This movie is one of the best-remembered of the so-called 'Kitchen Sink Dramas' that would become the trademark of the decade. It was an important film for many of its cast - not least for Rachel Roberts (later to commit suicide) who won a BAFTA for her role in the movie - and for a part she nearly never got! Also; Hylda Baker made her screen debut in this before going on to become a household name in her own sit-coms that would prove highly successful throughout the rest of the decade and early 70s, and for Edna Morris who will always be best-remembered for the trouble-making 'Ma Bull' who for her pains, gets an air pellet right on the backside - a priceless scene that's not to be missed!

'Arthur Seaton' (Albert Finney) is an angry young man who's out for a good time. He's not too bothered whose toes he treads upon - providing he gets what he wants, until that is, he meets 'Doreen' (Shirley Anne Field) who distracts him from a long-term relationship that was going no-where with a married woman. (Rachel Roberts)

This movie will be simply paradise for many as they recall the dingy, but 'homely' houses, smoky pubs, down to earth banter and the neighbours chatting with their hairnets on and arms folded over the garden gate - so many things that for so long now have become but a distant memory for many of us... A perfect capturing of 1960s 'ordinary' Britain forever - simply 'gold'!

There's also some very interesting Bonus Features on this DVD; (something I'm usually not into - but these are quite wonderful) including Interviews with both Albert Finney and Shirley Anne Field about the movie - a Commentary from several key people involved in making the film, (including the author of the original novel) and best of all; an hour long real-life documentary showing a bunch of ordinary young people enjoying a night out at a local Youth Club - and airing their views with a look at their lives that's really fascinating. It will bring back many memories of the period for thousands!

Great stuff!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Memories
It was great to see this old film again, it is a film I never get fed up of watching as it is based in the sixties when I was about 18 years old and it is so like what life was... Read more
Published 4 months ago by melody
Saturday Night
This deserves more than 5 stars, the product arrived quicker than some items bought from England. Not only that but documentation was put with the product on how to convert to no... Read more
Published 7 months ago by S. Lord
Saturday night restored and a good Sunday morning
In her laudable text dated 18 January 2006, Rebecca Wright ends her review with commenting that "Something I did find disappointing about the DVD itself is its lack of special... Read more
Published 9 months ago by Dr René Codoni
Must own in your collection
One of the best British movies ever. I'm from Canada and normally would never watch these types of movies but there are so many funny scenes in them I start laughing. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Wariner
Great Classic!.
Now this is a real British 60's classic, well worth the restoration by BFI. They have restored some real dud's but this is not one of them, so invest in this Great Classic!.
Published 13 months ago by Jimbo
Classic
This is one of the classic films of all time, until recently you would have to pay way in excess of £20 for this DVD. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Big Al
SATURDAY NIGHT AND SUNDAY MORNING.
Did not enjoy it as much as I thought I would, but it was still watchable, slow in parts and a bit boring.
Published 19 months ago by MARGE
good oldie!
the simple way life was, but this is one of my fave's. its gritty in parts, hilaroius in others, and a bit sad in parts, a good oldie if thats what you like!
Published 20 months ago by jasper
Albert finney at his best
Dont let black and white films put you off,my wife would never watch black and white films and i sat her down and made her watch this,she loved it. Read more
Published 20 months ago by lee moran
One Of The Best Of British
This 1960 made film of Alan Sillitoe's Book is an "angry young man" classic.
Set in Nottingham in around 1960, the story centres around stroppy piece-time factory worker... Read more
Published 21 months ago by Alan Argent
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