Woman in a Dressing Gown PG

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From the archive

This film was last shown on 2 August 2012

"A Brief Encounter of the council flats" - Jeffrey Richards

A decade before kitchen sink cinema became de rigeur, Woman In A Dressing Gown existed as a heartbreaking British melodrama to rival the women’s pictures of Douglas Sirk and Nicholas Ray. Intensely claustrophobic, with an almost oppressive filmmaking dynamic, the film is a simmering tale of the impact of adultery on the psyche of three desperate characters in post-war London. As the eponymous Woman, hanging from a thread while the dishes pile up around her, Yvonne Mitchell won the Silver Bear for Best Actress at the 7th Berlin International Film Festival.

The film is remarkable for its combustible atmosphere, centring around Mitchell’s performance as Amy Preston, the woman beset by the dowdiness she possesses in her husband’s eyes. Husband Jim (Anthony Quayle) swerves into the arms of pretty young colleague Georgie (Sylvia Syms) but his request for a divorce wrenches Amy into a dark reflection of what her life has become, in what remains a moving portrayal of repressed desires.

Made with kinetic brio by director J Lee Thompson, whose trade in hard edged dramas such as Yield To The Night and Ice Cold In Alex led to his later triumph, the brutal thriller Cape Fear, the film offers an innovative social realist approach, touching on the era’s raw divisions of class and echoing the Angry Young Man wave of British theatre at the time, but with a distinctly feminine edge.

Director
J. Lee Thompson
Year
1957
Duration
94 mins
Cast
Anthony Quayle, Sylvia Syms, Yvonne Mitchell

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