☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
A
Taste of Honey (1961) – T. Richardson
A key film in the “kitchen sink”
neo-realist movement in Britain in the early 1960s which took a hard look at
living conditions for the poor and working class and the various social
problems that affected them. Director
Tony Richardson worked with playwright Shelagh Delaney to adapt her recent 1958
play for the screen. Rita Tushingham
makes her debut appearance as Jo, a high school girl with an irresponsible
single mother who has to make it on her own when her mother abandons her for a
new husband. She falls in with a sailor
(who happens to be Black from Birmingham) and eventually finds she is pregnant
after he has shipped off. She finds
steady support from Geoff (Murray Melvin) a young gay man who is also one of society’s
outcasts. Richardson and DP Walter
Lassally shoot the film in that fresh new wave style similar to what was
happening in France at the time (but with echoes of the Italian Neo-realist
period too). Tushingham does a fine job
portraying a young girl managing a difficult time with aplomb and Dora Bryan is
excellent as her negligent swinging mother.
For its time, this film tackled some key taboos with equanimity. A good effort and right up there with the
other films in this movement (Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, 1960; The
Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner, 1962; This Sporting Life, 1963; Billy
Liar, 1963; and Kes, 1969; are the ones I’ve seen – all recommended).
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