Brief Encounter (1945)
Directed by David Lean

Romance / Drama

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Brief Encounter (1945)
Although often misrepresented (usually by people who have never seen the film), Brief Encounter is assuredly one of the great all-time classics of British cinema - and also one of the finest of fictional romances.  It was made in the last year of World War II, when social attitudes and individual morality were very different from what they are today.  The conflict that we see in this film - between society's expectations of married people and an individual's need for emotional fulfilment - is quite hard to appreciate today, yet it is this which gives the film its power and makes its ending so devastatingly poignant.  The story is every bit as tragic and as moving as Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliette, a tale of two lovers whose hopes of a happy future together are cruelly frustrated by circumstances beyond their control. 

Brief Encounter was adapted from a 30-minute one act play, entitled Still Life, which Noel Coward wrote in 1935.  It was directed by David Lean, the last and best of his four collaborations with Coward (which included the lively comedy Blithe Spirit (1945) and patriotic war film In Which We Serve (1942)).  Celia Johnson was offered the lead part in the film on the strength of her performance in an earlier Coward-Lean film, This Happy Breed (1944).  Her co-star, Trevor Howard, was relatively inexperienced, this being only his third film role.

More than anything, it is the performances which make Brief Encounter such an unforgettable film.  Celia Johnson is extraordinary in this film, conveying, with great subtlety and pathos, the torment of a love affair that takes possession of her character, and ends up by tearing her life apart.  The sense of aching loss she shows towards the end of the film is so real that it is almost unbearable to watch - a naked spectacle of desolation and anguish.  Whilst Johnson and Howard dominate the film, we can still appreciate the contributions from the supporting cast.  Particularly memorable are Stanley Holloway and Joyce Carey, whose characters' blatant over-the-counter flirtations provide an amusing (and bitterly ironic) counterpoint to the main story.

Noel Coward not only wrote the film's screenplay, but he also had some input into its production (although not so much as in his earlier collaborations with Lean).  One of the things he insisted on was the use of Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 2 as the main theme for the film.  It was an inspired decision because this particular piece of music, used generously throughout the film, underscores perfectly the emotional turbulence which gradually surfaces and ultimately engulfs the two protagonists as their love affair develops, from a thing of lyrical beauty to one of immense tragedy.  Lean's inspired composition of the film lends it further emotional depth and realism - particularly the use of film noir-like cinematography (emphasising the sense of guilt and isolation) and narrative flashbacks with a voiceover which allows us to share Laura's intimate thoughts. 

One problem posed by the production was where to shoot the railway station sequences, which were an integral part of the story.  Because of blackout restrictions at the time of filming, the south of England (where most of the shoot was done) had to be ruled out.  The production team had to go as far as Carnforth station in Lancashire, which was sufficiently far from London that adequate notice could be given for the lights to be extinguished in the event of an air raid.

Although David Lean and his producers had some anxiety over how the film would be received when it was released (at a time of national austerity), it proved to be a critical and commercial success.  Celia Johnson won the New York Film Critics Circle Best Actress Award and was nominated for an Academy Award in 1947 (one of the film's three Oscar nominations, the others being for Best Director and Best Screenplay). The film's biggest trophy was the Grand Prize at Cannes in 1946. After this sentimental journey, David Lean would direct his two famous Dickens adaptations Great Expectations (1946) and Oliver Twist (1948).
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next David Lean film:
Great Expectations (1946)

Film Synopsis

Each Thursday, housewife Laura Jesson treats herself to a day in the nearby town of Milford, to do some shopping and watch a film at the cinema.  Afterwards, she takes the train back to her comfortable suburban home where her husband and two children await her.   It's a drab life but Laura is not unhappy.  Then, one evening, she strikes up an acquaintance with Alec Harvey, a man she meets whilst waiting for a train.  He is a doctor who does consultancy work at Milford hospital every Thursday.  Like her, he is married, middle-aged, and has two young children.  After that one chance encounter, Laura's life suddenly changes.  She begins seeing Alec every Thursday afternoon.  At first, neither sees anything wrong with their liaisons.  But then they realise that they have become more than just friends.  They are in love - hopelessly in love...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: David Lean
  • Script: Anthony Havelock-Allan, David Lean, Ronald Neame, Noel Coward (play)
  • Cinematographer: Robert Krasker
  • Cast: Celia Johnson (Laura Jesson), Trevor Howard (Dr. Alec Harvey), Stanley Holloway (Albert Godby), Joyce Carey (Myrtle Bagot), Cyril Raymond (Fred Jesson), Everley Gregg (Dolly Messiter), Marjorie Mars (Mary Norton), Margaret Barton (Beryl Walters), Wilfred Babbage (Policeman at War Memorial), Alfie Bass (Waiter at the Royal), Wallace Bosco (Doctor at Bobbie's Accident), Sydney Bromley (Johnnie, Second Soldier), Nuna Davey (Herminie Rolandson), Valentine Dyall (Stephen Lynn), Irene Handl (Cellist and Organist), Dennis Harkin (Stanley, Beryl's Man), Edward Hodge (Bill, First Soldier), Jack May (Boat Rental Man), Avis Scott (Cardova Waitress), George V. Sheldon (Clergyman)
  • Country: UK
  • Language: English
  • Support: Black and White
  • Runtime: 86 min

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