Brighton Rock

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  • KG

    > 3 day

    Complex, disturbing noir character study/thriller about a 17 year old baby-faced gang leader named `Pinky, played by the director-to-be Richard Attenborough in an astonishing performance. Based on a Graham Greene novel, and co-written by Green and Terrence Rattigan (The Browning Version, The Winslow Boy), Pinky is a tremendously complex character, a sociopath to be sure, but one with a heart still beating somewhere deep down inside. Tortured by his Catholic upbringing, and repressed sexually, he vents his teen angst in violence that becomes increasingly uncontrollable, while finding his heart touched in spite of himself by a girl he marries ostensibly just to keep her from giving evidence against him. This is a tough picture, no Hollywood softened edges here. And arguably one of the better gangster films ever made.

  • Manifesta

    Greater than one week

    A brilliant noir film, far superior to the 2010 remake, although it softened elements from the even better novel.

  • M Monk

    > 3 day

    Richard Attenborough is sensational as a psychotic gangster. Bright Rocks still rocks after almost 70 years.

  • A Jones

    > 3 day

    You will also be very tempted to fall for the very cute hard-boiled psychopath, and sometimes thats ok. However, that warm-hearted streak of hope may be better spent on rescuing a puppy or a new pair of shoes. A somewhat hilarious intensity will mount...will he, wont he? The world may never know. Neither will she! Awesome.

  • matilda . azzara

    > 3 day

    Wonderful story and characters.

  • Sarah

    > 3 day

    My favourite movie, I watch it over and over and over ~ its a film noir, that does not fail!!!

  • KG

    Greater than one week

    Complex, disturbing noir character study/thriller about a 17 year old baby-faced gang leader named `Pinky, played by the director-to-be Richard Attenborough in an astonishing performance. Based on a Graham Greene novel, and co-written by Green and Terrence Rattigan (The Browning Version, The Winslow Boy), Pinky is a tremendously complex character, a sociopath to be sure, but one with a heart still beating somewhere deep down inside. Tortured by his Catholic upbringing, and repressed sexually, he vents his teen angst in violence that becomes increasingly uncontrollable, while finding his heart touched in spite of himself by a girl he marries ostensibly just to keep her from giving evidence against him. This is a tough picture, no Hollywood softened edges here. And arguably one of the better gangster films ever made.

  • US Grant

    > 3 day

    No worth buying.

  • Privacy, Please

    > 3 day

    If you like classic gangster-psychology films like Little Caesar and The Public Enemy, you will probably enjoy this original film adaptation of Graham Greenes novel set in crumbling 1930s Brighton. The recent remake transplanted the story to the 60s and changed quite a few more details; I think this original is better, and it regularly makes lists of top British films as well. The main character is a psychopathic teenage gangster named Pinkie (played by a very young Richard Attenborough), and he is truly menacing to the point where he can practically scare people to death. When a newspaperman on assignment to Brighton runs afoul of Pinkies mob and later turns up dead, a blowzy boardwalk performer, Ida (Hermione Baddeley) is convinced that Pinkie killed him and sets out to prove it and see justice done. Meanwhile, Pinkie is romancing a very young and naive waitress, Rose, who also happens to be a witness, and Ida becomes concerned with protecting her as well. Rose, of course, is the classic good girl who thinks she can help save a very bad guy just by loving him enough, and even if she cant save him, shes willing to go to the ends of the earth and die trying. Will Rose wise up and escape in one piece? Will Pinkie have a last-minute redemption through the power of love? Will Ida succeed in getting the cops to take an interest before Rose and/or herself end up dead? Oddly, theres not as much suspense to all of this as youd expect, even if you havent read Greenes book and dont know how its going to turn out (although if you have read the book, the films ending differs from it slightly - just enough to be interesting in its own right). Perhaps the lack of thrills is partly due to liberal use of Catholic symbology of heaven, hell (represented by fire), death, and other holy allusions (another witness is a blind man being led by a little girl) signifying that in the end, everybody is bound to get the reward they deserve, and the only question is how theyre going to get there. Its still a good, solid, well-made and well-acted film, and the emphasis on Roses Catholicism is in keeping with Greenes work. Also wonderful to see Baddeley in a long meaty role, sort of like a younger brash Jessica Fletcher, rather than her usual character roles as a maid or neighbor or whatnot. She was one heck of an actress. Its too bad that in her era, there werent tons of leading roles for chubby fortyish ladies. Overall, I recommend this version. Its so awesome, I have no idea why someone felt a need to remake it. About my only complaint is that the characters accents and slang can be a little hard for Americans to understand - you need to know that a blower means the telephone, for instance. But not too far removed from similarly slang-ridden US vintage gangster films.

  • Stephanie De Pue Murphy

    > 3 day

    Brighton Rock, (1947) is a classic 92-minute black and white film noir adaptation of outstanding British author Graham Greenes classic, early career, downbeat novel of the same name,

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