Tags
Language
Tags
June 2025
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 1 2 3 4 5
    Attention❗ To save your time, in order to download anything on this site, you must be registered 👉 HERE. If you do not have a registration yet, it is better to do it right away. ✌

    ( • )( • ) ( ͡⚆ ͜ʖ ͡⚆ ) (‿ˠ‿)
    SpicyMags.xyz

    Britannia Hospital (1982)

    Posted By: Someonelse
    Britannia Hospital (1982)

    Britannia Hospital (1982)
    A Film by Lindsay Anderson
    DVD5 | ISO | NTSC 16:9 (720x480) | 01:56:27 | 4,42 Gb
    Audio: English AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: None
    Genre: Drama, Comedy | UK

    Mick Travis is a reporter who is about to shoot a documentary on Britannia Hospital, an institution which mirrors the downsides of British Society. It's the day when Her Royal Highness is to visit the hospital to inaugurate a new wing, where advanced (and sinister) scientific experiments led by Prof. Millar will take place. Everybody in the hospital, from the cooks who refuse to cook, to the painters who couldn't care less to get their job done, to an African cannibalistic dictator (a la Amin Dada) whom demonstrators want expelled from the hospital and tried, will contribute to making HRH's visit (and Mick Travis's life) a true nightmare.

    IMDB

    Britannia Hospital (1982)

    Whilst it may lack the iconic vitality of 'If….' (1968) or the cinematic daring of 'O Lucky Man!' (1973), Lindsay Anderson’s 'Britannia Hospital' (1982) should nonetheless be regarded as highly as its well-received predecessors in the 'Mick Travis' trilogy. However, from its première at Cannes – which witnessed a walk-out by British critics – to the present day, opinion has generally been slanted against this sideswipe at Thatcherite Britain. Does this opinion fail to notice the powerful moral questions that lie beneath 'Britannia Hospital''s caustic exterior? Or does it choose to ignore them?

    Britannia Hospital (1982)

    It is likely that people have been swayed by the surface qualities of the film; many of which seem designed to ostracize the casual viewer. Not only is the popular Mick Travis (Malcolm McDowall) a peripheral figure (in comparison to his central roles in 'If….' and 'O Lucky Man!'), but also 'Britannia Hospital' eschews the subtle humour of its forerunners in favour of lurid silliness and near-slapstick. Further, the ultra-gory experiments conducted by the hospital's resident Frankenstein, Professor Millar (Graham Crowden), are fodder only for the midnight movie crowd.

    Britannia Hospital (1982)

    However, perhaps the feature of the film which most alienates the crowds is its seemingly cynical and unforgiving portrayal of humankind as a whole. 'Britannia Hospital''s overarching plot – which sees the titular establishment (acting as a microcosm for all of Thatcherite Britain) descend into conflict and madness, as 'haves' and 'have-nots' clash over healthcare – enables Anderson and his screenwriter, David Sherwin, to attack groups from across all of the political and social spectra. Both hospital workers and public figures, alike, are portrayed as being capable of cruelty, and thus almost no-one is spared Anderson's wrath.

    Britannia Hospital (1982)

    But, at the same time – and this is crucial – almost no-one is spared Anderson's compassion. It is this fact that prevents 'Britannia Hospital' from being the exercise in rampant cynicism that many believe it to be. The film recognizes that just as anyone, from any background, can be cruel, so too can anyone be a victim of cruelty. Accordingly, then, there are numerous scenes in which Anderson elicits our sympathy for his subjects, regardless of their place on the social ladder – for example, when left-wing demonstrators are brutally clubbed, or when the hospital's wealthy patients are refused treatment. These scenes are distinguished by emotive, Fordian close-ups of the victimized; close-ups which – as well as recalling the tenderness of earlier Anderson films such as 'Thursday’s Children' (1954) and 'Every Day Except Christmas' (1957) – serve to individualize the crowds. The message is almost Biblical: people persecute as groups but suffer as individuals. And so Anderson's true target becomes apparent: all organizations, classes, groupings and institutions which stand as a barrier to true human fellowship and understanding. Individuals deserve sympathy and forgiveness, whilst organizations do not; and herein lies the film's anarchism.

    Britannia Hospital (1982)

    However, there is perhaps one individual who is beyond forgiveness: Professor Millar, a latter-day Hitler who cloaks his plans for genocide – the replacement of brains with silicon chips; of humans with machines – in the language of science and progress. When his mysterious 'Genesis' project is unveiled at the film's astonishing climax, its mechanistic rendition of the “What a piece of work is man…” speech from Hamlet belies a single truth: no machine can ever truly replicate human soul or human artistry. In comparison to such monsters, humans are of almost limitless potential; yet – as the film's previous scenes have made clear – humankind needs to refine its methods of interaction in order for such potential to flourish. Rarely has cinema achieved so pure a humanism or made so momentous a statement.

    Britannia Hospital (1982)

    With its more considered world-view, 'Britannia Hospital' actually surpasses 'If….' and 'O Lucky Man!' in many respects, and represents the culmination of a near-lifetime’s worth of critical and intellectual engagement with the world on the part of Lindsay Anderson. Given this, the negative popular response to the film may well have been shattering for him as well as for his career (Derek Jarman predicted that Britannia Hospital “would finish Lindsay in the British film industry”). And indeed, soon after the film's short-lived release, Anderson was to scribe these despondent words in a letter to Malcolm McDowall:

    “I've been back in London – how long? - about three or four weeks … Time is rather featureless at the moment. I'm sure you'll understand when I say it's a dispiriting place to return to. The dark waters have closed over 'Britannia Hospital'”.
    Pete Hoskin
    Britannia Hospital (1982)

    Special Features:
    - An all-new 12 minute interview with Malcolm McDowall
    - Theatrical trailer
    - Talent bios
    Britannia Hospital (1982)


    Many Thanks to violator99.


    No More Mirrors.

    Download:




    Interchangable links.