THE LONG DAY CLOSES


Title   Cast   Director   Year Shown  Other Info    Country  Notes 




England, 1992, 82 min

Shown in 1993

CREDITS

dir
Terence Davies
prod
Olivia Stewart
scr
Terence Davies
cam
Michael Coulter
editor
William Diver
cast
Marjorie Yates, Leigh McCormack, Anthony Watson, Nicholas Lamont

OTHER

source
Sony Pictures Classics, 550 Madison Ave, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10022. FAX: 212-833-7911.

COMMENTS

Terence Davies in person.
The Long Day Closes

Continuing through territory masterfully illuminated in Distant Voices, Still Lives and his earlier Terrence Davies Trilogy (SFIFF 1984), The Long Day Closes excavates more of the rich ore of the director's Liverpool childhood. It focuses on his shy, daydreaming alter ego, Bud, growing up poor and Catholic during a time in the mid ’50s after the death of his brutal father when he felt "almost sick with happiness." Composed of the details and small moments that make up a life—a mother's favorite song sung softly to herself; a hot cup of cocoa on a cold rainy night; a family get-together; or a joyful trip to the cinema—the film is infused with a sense of contentment occasionally darkened by the shadow of sadness. The youngest in a large family, Bud often can't be part of his siblings activities and, at a new school, is just starting to face conflicts and realizations that will bring him into his own adulthood. Davies' muted colors, austere camera movements, painterly still lifes, snatches of dialogue and ripe, eclectic soundtrack—containing everything from Mahler to popular songs to traditional melodies to slivers of soundtracks from The Magnificent Ambersons and Great Expectations—are meticulously crafted into a sublime evocation of the imprint of time and place on one man. According to the director, "the film is a story of paradise, but the story of a paradise that's already being lost and will only survive as a memory." Davies' memories will stay with us for a long time.

—Rachel Rosen