The Terence Davies Trilogy

  • 101'
  • United Kingdom
  • 1984
'Originally there were three medium-length films (Children, Madonna and Child, Death and Transfiguration), all of which had the same protagonist, Robert Tucker, and followed him from childhood to death, illustrating a lifetime struggle between Robert's (homo-) sexuality and his Catholicism and family background. Terence Davies (1945, Liverpool) has now edited all three into a feature-length film in which the original three parts have become three acts of a continuing drama. For those in need of a filmic reference, the Davies Trilogy resembles the trilogy by Bill Douglas (My Childhood, My Ain Folk, and My Way Home). Davies has stripped his fragmented narrative to the barest essentials: the way the light falls through a window to light a room and the character sitting in it, a glance, an obliquely heard half-phrase, the tones in which a name is pronounced, all provide more needed information than dialogue (of which there is a minimum). The sudden understanding shock of sexual self-discovery when the young Robert sees the water running over the body of an older boy in a school shower room has never been captured so accurately (and economically) on screen before. The film is not a happy one (films about repression never are) but it is terrifyingly moving.' (David Overbey, 1984)
See also Of Time and the City (2008) in Spectrum.
  • 101'
  • United Kingdom
  • 1984
Director
Terence Davies
Country of production
United Kingdom
Year
1984
Festival Edition
IFFR 2009
Length
101'
Medium
35mm
Language
English
Screenplay
Terence Davies
Director
Terence Davies
Country of production
United Kingdom
Year
1984
Festival Edition
IFFR 2009
Length
101'
Medium
35mm
Language
English
Screenplay
Terence Davies