Love and Death On Long Island

  • 93'
  • United Kingdom
  • 1997
The life of the respected writer and widower Giles De'Ath (John Hurt) is shaped by books. He works at a British university where little has changed in the last century. His housekeeper is therefore pretty shocked when one day she finds out that the stuffy professor has acquired a TV and a video recorder. De'Ath has become fascinated - to his own amazement too - by the American teenage star Ronnie Bostock (played by Jason Priestley, known from Beverly Hills 90210). From that day on he spends most of his time watching pulp films like 'Hotpants College II' and he soon turns into an expert on American youth culture. He leaves for Long Island, where the papers say that Ronnie lives. There he moves into a motel and is determined to find the object of his desires. In view of the not-entirely platonic obsession of the older man for male youth and new-era dynamism, it is no surprise that Love and Death on Long Island has been compared with Visconti's Death in Venice. Nevertheless, Kwietnowski's film is eventually more about a confrontation between two cultures, about the power of cinema and what feelings film can rouse. The leading role looks made to measure for John Hurt.
Directors
Richard Kwietniowski, Richard Kwietniowski
Country of production
United Kingdom
Year
1997
Festival Edition
IFFR 1998
Length
93'
Medium
35mm
Language
English
Producers
Skyline Film & TV Productions, Steve Clark-Hall, Christopher Zimmer
Sales
The Works Film Group, Cinemien
Screenplay
Richard Kwietniowski
Local Distributor
Cinemien
Directors
Richard Kwietniowski, Richard Kwietniowski
Country of production
United Kingdom
Year
1997
Festival Edition
IFFR 1998
Length
93'
Medium
35mm
Language
English
Producers
Skyline Film & TV Productions, Steve Clark-Hall, Christopher Zimmer
Sales
The Works Film Group, Cinemien
Screenplay
Richard Kwietniowski
Local Distributor
Cinemien