Showing posts with label Rita Tushingham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rita Tushingham. Show all posts

Saturday, 31 August 2024

Rita and Lynn go swinging... Smashing Time (1967)

 

Look, I may be green but I'm not cabbage coloured...

The difference between American and British psychedelia is often put down to the former’s greater seriousness driven by civil rights and the Vietnam War, US music and film of this period was generally more earnest although that wasn’t always a trademark of quality. The Brits for their part were more flower than power with pure whimsy rather than lysergic acid often being the case. That said, Sgt Pepper and Magical Mystery Tour quickly turned into Helter Skelter and Yer Blues, the Floyd lost Syd and started experimenting with music concrete and politics. In cinematic terms there seem to have been as many lame and tame US attempts at catching the zeitgeist as British and, ultimately, if you were there you probably don’t remember anyway.

Smashing Time could be viewed as an outsider’s take but there were enough cool and talented folk involved to still make it of interest. It was also filmed in Kings Road, Camden - The Roundhouse - Carnaby Street and the surrounds and there’s a genuine psychedelic buzz even if, as was probably the case at the time, the world was still mostly set in the reality of post-war austerity as much as the funky future: there’s certainly enough “dreary” on view in the streets.

Written by the by then middle-aged scouse jazzman George Melly, film and TV critic for the Observer at this time, he certainly knew the scene and even if that was less intimately than someone half his age, he’d been there in the fifties and no doubt mixed with the young trendies as he moved from the Colony Rooms to the French or the Coach; the regular Soho haunts that are mostly still there. In the 1980s I bumped into him in the old Soho Brasserie and we talked about Ronnie Scotts, a venue he must have played so many times.

Rita Tushingham and Lynn Redgrave

His work here is strongest in its presentation of the relationship of the leading characters played by two of the era’s great “It” Girls, fellow scouser Rita Tushingham as Brenda and Lynn Redgrave as Yvonne and. As my Gen Z daughter points out, the two are like competitive sisters, getting each other out of trouble even as they bicker and compete with the willowy Yvonne more certain of her own importance and Brenda smartly supporting her and, most often, getting her own way. Sisters, sisters… lord help the mister who comes between them.

The film starts with Brenda and Yvonne travelling down for the unspecified North to arrive at St Pancras, the first of many great locations all of which are covered in detail over at Reel Streets. The girls get a taxi across the West End crossing Weymouth Street with a view of the then brand-new Post Office Tower before heading over to Fleet Road in Belsize Park where they aim to stay. They lose their money to a tramp though and there’s a slapstick food fight in a café run by Arthur Mullard which ends up as a psychedelic mess and Brenda washing up.

Arthur Mullard

Yvonne meanwhile heads off to Carnaby Street which gives a real flavour of Swinging London full of garish signage and bright-coloured clothes. She gets photographed by top fashion taste-maker Tom Wabe (Michael York) who puts her in a newspaper as part of his series on The Girls Who Get it Wrong. Brenda buys some new – old – clothes from Mrs. Gimble’s (Irene Handl) thrift store and gets a job in a trendy shop run by Charlotte Brillig (Anna Quayle) but gets it wrong as she starts to sell the stock which was never Charlotte’s intention.

They find accommodation at 16 Grudge Street and their landlady, Toni (Toni Palmer) also gets them work as hostesses in a Soho club which involves Brenda dressing up as a rather fetching squirrel and Yvonne in evening ware. Neither has a clue about the subtext of their work and Squirrel has to come to Yvonne’s rescue when tipsy minor noble, Bobby Mome-Rath (Ian Carmichael on fine form), tries to have his evil way.

 

Lynn, Rita and Ian

Throughout Melly’s fast-flowing script there are numerous digs at materialism and the phoney rebellion against it. The girls eventually make it when their house is destroyed as part of a prank TV show hosted by Peter Jones as Dominic. Yvonne takes their winnings and buys herself into a career as a pop star, singing a suitably empty song about not being able to sing etc. The songs are all written by Academy Award winner (for Tom Jones (1963)) John Addison with Melly providing most of the lyrics and the two leads singing

Yvonne is a huge success with Jeremy Tove (Jeremy Lloyd) plotting out her future in the fast-moving world of hear-today, gone tomorrow but when he calls in super-snapper Tom Wabe, he renews his acquaintance with Brenda and, whisking her away to his house boat in the Regents Street Basin he takes the photo sets that will make her the new sensation.

The girls fall out and everything comes to a head at a swinging party in the revolving restaurant at the top of the Post Office Tower which has an hilarious guest list, with actress (Veronica Carlson) and Bishop, followed by a John and Yoko alike couple, a small Twiggy-type and what could be The Fab Four carry a swami on a carpet. Upstairs we see Tove’s latest group, The Snarks, played by members of Tomorrow, who really were genuine psychedelic royalty, Keith West who had a huge hit with Grocer Jack, Steve Howe, later of Asia and still lead guitarists with Prog Lords Yes and Twink who not only went to join The Pink Fairies but played with Syd Barrett post-Floyd - perhaps the pre-eminent figure of The Underground.

 

Keith West, Steve Howe and Twink

Dusty Verdict: Smashing Time is a flawed but richly entertaining film well directed by Desmond Davis who also made Girl with Green Eyes (1964) with Tushingham and Clash of the Titans (1981) with a robot owl! In addition to catching the moment also shows the city during this period of change as old Victorian streets were transformed and modernist concrete was on the rise – the irony being that much of this is now being replaced although what is now the BT Tower still stands.

For me Rita Tushingham is MVP and is full of energy and animated invention, hopping along the early morning Hampstead Streets in her squirrel costume and making a PC on the beat laugh whilst adding moments of seriousness too, especially in her relationship with Michael Yorke’s character. Lynn Redgrave gives a broader performance being both less northern than Rita and aligned with Melly’s sense of humour.

The film performed poorly though and was described by The Monthly Film Bulletin as "A clumsy attempt to create a female comedy team…  the glossy vulgarity of Smashing Time quickly becomes as irritating as the brash musical score and the discordant colours that constantly fill the screen." It’s value as a time capsule and the intent behind a critique of what we have seen rinsed and repeated ever since do make it worth your time, just don’t expect Blow Up!

Lynn Redgrave

Michael York and Rita T at The Roundhouse


Toni Palmer and one of the defining images of the sixties...



Sunday, 4 January 2015

On your bike… The Leather Boys (1964)


It doesn’t come much more “period” than this: a film that gently pushed the boundaries at the time and which might be damned by our benign condescension 50 years later. Looked at in context though, The Leather Boys deserves the respect its good intentions demand: there’s fine acting from three wildly differing leads and a slice of a life that has almost disappeared. This was a Britain in which new opportunities were opening up – a time of Butlins, self-determination and Triumph Bonnevilles – and yet old attitudes still held sway.

Young motorcyclists – “Ton-up Boys” - may have gathered around the Ace Café on London’s North Circular Road but they were still too eagerly rushing into adult life and commitment: and you shall know them by their velocity…

Motorbiking
Reggie (Colin Campbell) is one such young man. He’s not long left school for an engineering apprenticeship and is romancing a girl from his old school, Dot (Rita Tushingham) who dreams of classroom liberation: married with freedom.

Rita Tushingham and Colin Campbell
Sure enough the two precede straight to wedlock and do not pass “Go”… but almost immediately their relationship turns sour as their modest honeymoon in Butlins at Bognor Regis reveals their differing temperaments. Reggie wants a quiet time with Dot whilst she wants to socialise with other campers, see more movies and sample the extensive delights of the holiday camp. Reggie’s the considered romantic one and Dot is the extravert sensation seeker… you forget which one rides the Bonneville.

This could be a Smiths LP cover...
Back home things rapidly deteriorate as Reggie finds Dot disinclined to perform her household duties: shirts are un-ironed, the bed is un-made and, worst of all, his dinner is un-cooked.  Enraged at his new wife’s preference for cinema over chores the spark even begins to go out on their sex life – the one thing once guaranteed to silence any rows.

At the same time Reggie begins to spend more time with an odd-bod biker buddy Pete (Dudley Sutton) – an unconventional presence at the Ace who lives for the moment and dreams of escape to New York. Pete is the most loyal of pals, preferring to spend time alone with Reggie shooting fireworks from the wasteland near where he works or maintaining their bikes together.

Colin Campbell and Dudley Sutton
There’s an instant distance between Pete and Dot and yet Reggie barely notices: he feels the same way about Dot himself from time to time. But Dot is getting worse and as she plays up following his grandfather’s death, she pushes Reggie further away into Pete’s boys-own world of bikes.

Reggie arranges for Pete to stay with his gran (Gladys Henson) and is almost a lone voice in keeping her out of a nursing home and in her own home – Dot joining in with his brother-in-law in arguing for her to sell up. Pete charms the old dear and as Reggie walks out on Dot, the two share her spare room.

Pete's nights with Reg...
Dot begins hanging around with another biker, Brian (Johnny Briggs) whilst Reggie and Pete head off to the seaside where the latter proves distinctly uninterested in chasing two girls Reggie chats up… the modern viewer may easily guess where this is headed but imagine a world where such intimacies was not only underground but illegal?

Dot hatches a plan to bring Reggie back by telling him she’s expecting a baby and he immediately suspects her new friend Brian and decks him at the Ace but it’s all a fiction…

Rita and him off Corrie...
The bikers organise a race to Edinburgh and Dot rides pillion with Brian whilst Pete and Reggie gear up to win… but Pete’s competitive instincts are compromised by his lingering affection and he stops off for the chance to re-connect with Dot. Pete rides on alone…

Will Dot and Pete’s revival survive their return to the everyday and will Pete ever get the point about his mate? Things aren’t straightforward… a bit like life.

Edinburgh
Dusty verdict: Whilst not on the same level of say A Taste of Honey, The Leather Boys is never the less and impressive period piece that captures the moment for motorcycle culture.

The boys are confused...
The performances are superb although sometimes the improvised riffing gets a bit shouty – but maybe I’m getting old! Rita Tushingham is a bundle of conflicted energy as Dot whilst Dudley Sutton excels as the biker with a sentimental core - his comic bluster concealing a love that, literally, dare not speak its name.

But the girl understands...
The Leather Boys is available on DVD and streaming from Amazon. 

Elsewhere, the Ace Café is still open for business and you can find details on their site of the last fifty years of ton-up boys and girls!

The Ace Cafe