The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner
Overview
Alan Sillitoe's autobiographical novel about a rebellious 18-year-old living in dreary Lancashire proved to be the perfect material for Tony Richardson to adapt in the early 1960s. The film stars Tom Courtenay as the disaffected Colin Smith, who ends up in a Borstal, or reform school, after robbing a bakery. The Governor (Sir Michael Redgrave), the institution's chief authority, believes in physical training as a means of rehabilitating his charges. Despite his contempt for all authority, Colin one day inadvertently outruns the school's leading long-distance runner, and the Governor immediately assigns him to be trained for an imminent competition with a well-known public school. During his solitary training exercises, Colin flashes back to scenes of his chaotic youth: his father, a blue-collar worker dying of cancer, and his mother, a foul-mouthed harridan, blowing the insurance settlement on a new lover and a new TV. On the day of the big race, the two schools must share a locker room, and Gunthorpe (James Fox), the captain of the opposing team, reflexively wishes Colin good luck. The surprised boy looks at him as though these are the only words of encouragement he's ever received. Courtenay is exceptional in his film debut, exuding the bitterness typical of the director's early "angry young man" films. Employing jump cuts and undercranked scenes borrowed from the Nouvelle Vague, the film emphasizes the oppressiveness of the boy's environment and the temporary freedom that running offers him.
Awards:
Main Cast & Crew:
Tony Richardson - Director
James Cairncross
Tom Courtenay
Michael Redgrave
Avis Bunnage
Peter Madden
James Bolam
Topsy Jane
Raymond Dyer
Alec McCowen
Julia Foster
Details
- Format: DVD (Manufactured on Demand)
- Run Time: 104
- Color Format: B&W
- UPC: 883316734483
- Genre: DRAMA
- Rating: Not Rated
- Release Date: April 2013
Movie Reviews
Synopsis:
A troubled British youth is sent to prison after a checkered period of unemployment and petty theft. When asked to represent his correctional facility in a long-distance race, the lad agrees but sees the contest as a means of retribution against a corrupt system.
Notes:
THE LONELINESS OF THE LONG DISTANCE RUNNER marked Tom Courtenay's feature-film debut.
Reviews:
"...The nihilistic, punky buzz packs an immortal wallop....Classic..." - 11/01/2002 Total Film, p.110
"...Call them art or artifacts of an age, but most of the Brit working-class dramas from the early 1960s still hold up....[An] era-evocative movie..." - 12/04/1992 USA Today, p.3D
"...British realism meets novelle vague-style realism in Allan Sillitoe's tale about a young delinquent who turn out to be a brilliant cross-country runner..." - 05/01/2003 Sight and Sound, p.68
"What does hold up is Courtenay's natural, scrappy performance." -- Grade: B - 02/16/2007 Entertainment Weekly, p.65
"Mr. Courtenay is pretty remarkable....Walter Lassally did the excellent black-and-white cinematography..." - 01/11/2013 Wall Street Journal
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