Room at the Top

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ROOM AT THE TOP



UK, 1958


Director: Jack Clayton

Production: Romulus Films, Ltd.; black and white, 35mm; running time: 115 minutes. Released 1958, Britain.

Producers: John and James Woolf; screenplay: Neil Paterson, from the novel by John Braine; photography: Freddie Francis; editor: Ralph Kemplen; art director: Ralph Brinton; music: Mario Nascimbene.


Cast: Laurence Harvey (Joe Lampton); Simone Signoret (Alice Aisgill); Heather Sears (Susan Brown); Donald Houston (Charles Soames); Donald Wolfit (Mr. Brown); Hermione Baddeley (Elspeth); John Westbrook (Jack Wales).


Awards: British Academy Awards for Best Film, Best British Film, and Best Foreign Actress (Signoret), 1958; Cannes Film Festival, Best Actress (Signoret), 1959; Oscars for Best Actress (Signoret) and Best Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium, 1959.


Publications


Books:

Manvell, Roger, New Cinema in Britain, New York, 1969.

Durgnat, Raymond, A Mirror for England: British Movies fromAusterity to Affluence, New York, 1971.

Betts, Ernest, The Film Business—A History of British Cinema:1896–1972, New York, 1973.

Perry, George, The Great British Picture Show, New York, 1974.

Walker, Alexander, Hollywood U.K., New York, 1974.

Hickey, Des, and Gus Smith, The Prince . . . Laurence Harvey, London, 1975.

Gaston, Georg, Jack Clayton: A Guide to References and Resources, Boston, 1981.

Sandre, Didier, Simone Signoret, Paris, 1981.

Hill, John, Sex, Class, and Realism: British Cinema 1956–63, London, 1986.


Articles:

Dyer, Peter John, in Films and Filming (London), February 1959.

Houston, Penelope, in Sight and Sound (London), Spring 1959.

Mekas, Jonas, in Village Voice (New York), 29 April 1959.

Fitzpatrick, Ellen, in Films in Review (New York), May 1959.

Alexander, A. J., in Film Culture (New York), Summer 1961.

Kael, Paulin, "Commitment and Strait Jacket," in Film Quarterly (Berkeley) Fall 1961.

"Laurence Harvey: Following My Actor's Instinct," in Films andFilming (London), October 1961.

Cowie, Peter, "Clayton's Progress," in Motion (London), Spring 1962.

Signoret, Simone, "On Being under a Director's Spell," in Films andFilming (London), June 1962.

Cowie, Peter, "The Face of 63: Britain," in Films and Filming (London), February 1963.

Stanbrook, Alan, "Laurence Harvey." in Films and Filming (London), May 1964.

Gregory, C. T., "There'll Always Be Room at the Top for Nothing But the Best," in Journal of Popular Film (Washington, D.C.), Winter 1973.

Donaldson, Leslie, in Magill's Survey of Cinema 3, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1980.

Philbert, B., in Cinématographe (Paris), September 1982.

Cluny, C. M., in Cinéma (Paris), October 1982.

Lefèvre, Raymond, in Image et Son, November 1982.

Combs, Richard, "Upward Mobility," in Listener, vol. 114, no. 2931, 17 October 1985.

Palmer, R.B., "What Was New in the British New Wave?: Reviewing Room at the Top," in Journal of Popular Film andTelevision (Washington, D.C.), vol. 14, no. 3, Fall 1986.

Ward, L.E., "The Great Films: Some Came Running and Room at theTop," in Classic Images (Muscatine), no. 168, June 1989.


* * *

From post-war Britain emerged the syndrome of the angry young man, one apparently intent on overthrowing established social conventions and codes of behavior. In the theatre, John Osborne's Look Back in Anger set the pace; in fiction, John Braine's Room at the Top. With Jack Clayton's film of the Braine novel, the syndrome became known internationally to film audiences, its central character, Joe Lampton, becoming the epitome of the restless young Englishman fed up with social traditions that made life forever one situated in the lower or middle class.

In this his feature film debut, Clayton displayed a feeling for atmosphere and character delineation that made this study of social, political and sexual behavior one of the most significant and successful British films of the 1950s. Its failure to receive Code approval in the United States only increased its popularity, confirming the notion that the film-going public was ready for more mature films, films that involved a more realistic portrait of current social and sexual realities.

Having spent three years as a prisoner of war, Joe Lampton decides that he is owed more than slavery for his wartime duties and thus he seeks to break through the rigid provincial social structure of the industrial town of Warnley. Convinced that ability is not the key to advancement, he sets his sights on marriage to Susan Brown, the daughter of a local industrialist and community leader. The more his status-seeking is discouraged, the more actively he pursues his goals, bribery, public embarrassment, and removal of the object of affection all failing to curtail Joe's activities. Almost from the beginning it is clear that Joe's love is not for Susan but for the status she will provide.

Ever the opportunist, Joe takes advantage of the disastrous marital situation of Alice Aisgill, the leading lady of the village theatre group, and before long they are lovers. Alice falls in love; Joe continues to place his priorities on money and status. When Susan returns from her father-induced exile, Joe seduces her, subsequently realizing that while he desires what Susan can provide, his love is for Alice. Joe, however, must pay for his crime. When Susan becomes pregnant, her father attempts to bribe Joe, offering to set him up in business if he agrees never to see Susan again, and, when that fails, forcing him to marry Susan and agree never to see Alice again. Joe now finds himself caught in the web he has constructed, realizing too late that his freedom from social structures is not a function of money and status but of self, that before he can be outwardly free he must be inwardly free. His room at the top may be lined with gold, but the achievement of that position ensures not happiness but misery. The ending of this film is a bitter parody of the conventional happy ending: a two-shot situates the wedding couple, she in her joy, he in his misery, the tightness of the frame depicting the restrictiveness of Joe's new social position.

The success of Room at the Top set in motion a new genre of British cinema, the "kitchen sink drama" with its emphasis on social realism. Over the next five years such strong examples as Saturday Night and Sunday Morning and This Sporting Life won international acclaim.

—Doug Tomlinson

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