Añade un argumento en tu idiomaAfter tragedy befalls a wounded American WWII pilot, his young captain embarks on a quest to receive desperately needed therapy from a compassionate woman.After tragedy befalls a wounded American WWII pilot, his young captain embarks on a quest to receive desperately needed therapy from a compassionate woman.After tragedy befalls a wounded American WWII pilot, his young captain embarks on a quest to receive desperately needed therapy from a compassionate woman.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
Frank Schock
- Man in Pub
- (sin acreditar)
Stan Simmons
- Man in pub
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
Watching this film one is reminded of the old joke about Doris Day before she was a virgin; since this features Susan Hampshire before she was signed up by Disney (and with the Bad Girl ironically played by Jackie Collins).
Three years before she briefly but dramatically donned a wet bikini in homage to Ursula Andress in 'Dr No' in 'Wonderful Life', Miss Hampshire appeared nude (if that IS her!) for director Sidney J. Furie in this earnest little drama inspired by 'Tea and Sympathy' about an aspect of life in wartime Britain still little dealt with in films about that time (and that not all war wounds were in the arm), which carried an 'X' certificate in the year of the Lady Chatterly trial.
It could have done without that insistent music score by Bill McGuffie though...
Three years before she briefly but dramatically donned a wet bikini in homage to Ursula Andress in 'Dr No' in 'Wonderful Life', Miss Hampshire appeared nude (if that IS her!) for director Sidney J. Furie in this earnest little drama inspired by 'Tea and Sympathy' about an aspect of life in wartime Britain still little dealt with in films about that time (and that not all war wounds were in the arm), which carried an 'X' certificate in the year of the Lady Chatterly trial.
It could have done without that insistent music score by Bill McGuffie though...
David, a shy young Captain in the US Air Force based in England during the Second World War, is stunned when his co-pilot commits suicide after being injured during a mission. He decides that he needs to make the most of his life before it is too late. Can Jean, a young English barmaid, be the answer?
Directed by Sidney J. Furie, this X-certificated film is very unusual for its time with its bold subject matter and even bolder scenes. Maybe the storyline is not always convincing and, at times the acting even less so, but it makes for interesting viewing. Stars Don Borisenko and Susan Hampshire as the couple.
Directed by Sidney J. Furie, this X-certificated film is very unusual for its time with its bold subject matter and even bolder scenes. Maybe the storyline is not always convincing and, at times the acting even less so, but it makes for interesting viewing. Stars Don Borisenko and Susan Hampshire as the couple.
Gifted workhouse director, Sidney J. Furie's palpably bizarre wartime morality play about an especially 'sensitive' captain in the USAF, and his singularly fraught Journey to lose his virginity before a final bombing run, climaxes awkwardly after a series of uncommonly strange happenings! 'During One Night' is demonstratively not great cinema, yet it is, arguably, not an entirely objectionable film either, since it fortuitously errs all-too tantalizingly into proto-John Waters, Ed. Wood Jr. WTF territory. With only a modicum of irony, I earnestly claim that it merits a cautious recommendation for those twisted cineastes who savour the more esoteric elements of forgotten cinema! And, Holy Bromide!!! For the not-yet swinging 1961s, the weirdly didactic potboiler proved to be a remarkably racy one; and should anyone have longed to witness eternal English Rose, Susan Hampshire desultorily disrobing during a 'romantic' tryst in a bucolically-imagined, salaciously straw-slathered studio/barn, well, needfully yearn no longer, because Furie delivers said frisson-inducing titbit with a laudable lack of taste!
While Sidney J. Furie's moderately compelling cinematic oddity, 'During One Night '(1961) aka 'Night of Passion' remains a curate's egg, and stodgy lead actor, Don Borisenko, is stultifyingly imbued with all the electrifying screen presence of day-old semolina pudding, miraculously, the pleasantly naive drama's inadvertent lapses into wholly unexpected mondo movie eccentricity proved fitfully amusing!
While Sidney J. Furie's moderately compelling cinematic oddity, 'During One Night '(1961) aka 'Night of Passion' remains a curate's egg, and stodgy lead actor, Don Borisenko, is stultifyingly imbued with all the electrifying screen presence of day-old semolina pudding, miraculously, the pleasantly naive drama's inadvertent lapses into wholly unexpected mondo movie eccentricity proved fitfully amusing!
Furie's little seen DURING ONE NIGHT is another of the director's striking early studies in male anxiety. In his THE LEATHER BOYS of 3 years later such anxiety would be explicitly situated around the lure of homosexuality while in THE IPCRESS FILE, still further on in the director's career, concerns would be more centred around male loyalty. In DURING ONE NIGHT air force captain David is part of an airborne male group, first seen with military and sexual camaraderie intact, flying on their 24th mission - leaving only another before their tour of duty gratefully ends. Things change however when one of their number is badly injured during a flight, an injury which emasculates him. After an emotional bedside description of the injury, then later hearing of the later suicide of his flying companion, David goes temporarily AWOL with a view to proving his own manhood before his number comes up.
As written, produced, and directed by Furie DURING ONE NIGHT was at its recent airing briefly dismissed by a UK listings critic as dated, but in fact is a very interesting piece of work, if handicapped by the sentimentality of an ending which suggests that the only fulfilment of sexual desire between a man and a woman can be achieved by romantic love. But perhaps this unconvincingness is the point, as Furie's script repeatedly refers to a lack of male fulfilment through the traditional routes up until this point, while the unspoken alternative lurks in the background. Both David and his dead companion are virgins despite appearances to the contrary, while during the night in question David fails to perform (or "enjoy the product" as it is expressed) with three women in succession: a prostitute, a sexual hustler and finally the innocent Jean (Susan Hampshire, in her first screen role).
Implicit in David's male circle of friends is a vaguely homosexual bonding. None are overtly gay (this was made a few years before homosexuality was legalised in the UK). Yet David is continually worried at not being 'normal', while his suicidal friend during their bedside meeting hints at the dark options left remaining to a man in his physical condition, when regular sexual activity is denied him. While David repeatedly tries to go through with things with various women in his despondent panic he is only able to succeed, and gain full satisfaction, after a peculiar encounter with a military parson, intimate in all but name, in a field late at night. While the parson is rescuing David from his own suicidal propensity by taking him to the edge, upon reflection it's significant that David can only function and reassert himself as a man immediately after the revelations brought after 'being' with another.
As David, Don Borisenko is rather good, which makes one regret that his film career was relatively short (he apparently stopped acting in the 70's). In a difficult role, too often inviting the sniggers of modern audiences, he manages to convey David's sensitivity and sexual apprehensions very well. Less successful is Hampshire's Jean, another virgin met in the film, whose presence, while certainly suggesting the necessary innocence, is a little flat. Her role demands a self-sacrifice only made 'right' by a commitment more than sexual, and whether or not you accept this as believable will dictate how Furie's script works for the viewer, cynical or not.
In one of the film's best scenes, for a long minute David sings a melancholy ode quietly into his pint glass while, hovering in the background just out of focus Jean watches him from behind the bar. At this point David's isolation is both sexual and social, as he has effectively removed himself from society by his increasing despondency and hitherto sexual failure. Jean of course will find him attractive and help him to find himself. But others will also recognise the coded figure of the outsider, alone at that bar, half-heartedly seeking sexual encounters. If in THE LEATHER BOYS Furie's representation of the homosexual underworld is exaggerated and somewhat fearful, in this earlier representation here the pattern is almost entirely subsumed by the heterosexuality of the setting; only David's internal panics and fears a clue to the suspicions on display.
DURING ONE NIGHT's concern with male anxiety and sexual identity is both dated and modern. And while Furie's view of romantic love as the solver of all sexual angst is peculiarly uneasy - perhaps stemming from a desire to appease traditional mores, the matter of adult male sexual crises, both here and in LEATHER BOYS is unusual and treated with some sensitivity. Recommended as a worthwhile corner of British 60's cinema.
As written, produced, and directed by Furie DURING ONE NIGHT was at its recent airing briefly dismissed by a UK listings critic as dated, but in fact is a very interesting piece of work, if handicapped by the sentimentality of an ending which suggests that the only fulfilment of sexual desire between a man and a woman can be achieved by romantic love. But perhaps this unconvincingness is the point, as Furie's script repeatedly refers to a lack of male fulfilment through the traditional routes up until this point, while the unspoken alternative lurks in the background. Both David and his dead companion are virgins despite appearances to the contrary, while during the night in question David fails to perform (or "enjoy the product" as it is expressed) with three women in succession: a prostitute, a sexual hustler and finally the innocent Jean (Susan Hampshire, in her first screen role).
Implicit in David's male circle of friends is a vaguely homosexual bonding. None are overtly gay (this was made a few years before homosexuality was legalised in the UK). Yet David is continually worried at not being 'normal', while his suicidal friend during their bedside meeting hints at the dark options left remaining to a man in his physical condition, when regular sexual activity is denied him. While David repeatedly tries to go through with things with various women in his despondent panic he is only able to succeed, and gain full satisfaction, after a peculiar encounter with a military parson, intimate in all but name, in a field late at night. While the parson is rescuing David from his own suicidal propensity by taking him to the edge, upon reflection it's significant that David can only function and reassert himself as a man immediately after the revelations brought after 'being' with another.
As David, Don Borisenko is rather good, which makes one regret that his film career was relatively short (he apparently stopped acting in the 70's). In a difficult role, too often inviting the sniggers of modern audiences, he manages to convey David's sensitivity and sexual apprehensions very well. Less successful is Hampshire's Jean, another virgin met in the film, whose presence, while certainly suggesting the necessary innocence, is a little flat. Her role demands a self-sacrifice only made 'right' by a commitment more than sexual, and whether or not you accept this as believable will dictate how Furie's script works for the viewer, cynical or not.
In one of the film's best scenes, for a long minute David sings a melancholy ode quietly into his pint glass while, hovering in the background just out of focus Jean watches him from behind the bar. At this point David's isolation is both sexual and social, as he has effectively removed himself from society by his increasing despondency and hitherto sexual failure. Jean of course will find him attractive and help him to find himself. But others will also recognise the coded figure of the outsider, alone at that bar, half-heartedly seeking sexual encounters. If in THE LEATHER BOYS Furie's representation of the homosexual underworld is exaggerated and somewhat fearful, in this earlier representation here the pattern is almost entirely subsumed by the heterosexuality of the setting; only David's internal panics and fears a clue to the suspicions on display.
DURING ONE NIGHT's concern with male anxiety and sexual identity is both dated and modern. And while Furie's view of romantic love as the solver of all sexual angst is peculiarly uneasy - perhaps stemming from a desire to appease traditional mores, the matter of adult male sexual crises, both here and in LEATHER BOYS is unusual and treated with some sensitivity. Recommended as a worthwhile corner of British 60's cinema.
During One Night is written and directed by Sidney J. Furie and stars Don Borisenko & Susan Hampshire. Story tells of a soldier (Borisenko) who after seeing his friend suffer castration during an accident, takes leave from his unit to lose his virginity. But upon meeting Jean (Hampshire) his ideals and fears are turned in another direction.
A little unknown piece that occasionally shows up on British TV in the early hours of the morning, During One Night is far better than any plot synopsis suggests. It's a very tender movie, one that is impeccably acted by Borisenko & Hampshire. Very much dialogue driven, it finds two people confronting issues that affect them psychologically. Brought together by chance, they each have to go deep into themselves to hopefully reap the benefits. Will they make it? What does life have in store for them? Thankfully we do care what happens to this couple because it's so well written. For those willing to give their undivided time and attention to a human interest piece then this is certainly recommended. 7/10
A little unknown piece that occasionally shows up on British TV in the early hours of the morning, During One Night is far better than any plot synopsis suggests. It's a very tender movie, one that is impeccably acted by Borisenko & Hampshire. Very much dialogue driven, it finds two people confronting issues that affect them psychologically. Brought together by chance, they each have to go deep into themselves to hopefully reap the benefits. Will they make it? What does life have in store for them? Thankfully we do care what happens to this couple because it's so well written. For those willing to give their undivided time and attention to a human interest piece then this is certainly recommended. 7/10
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesDon Borisenko and Susan Hampshire both receive "introducing" credits.
- PifiasThe prostitute tells David she charges £5 a time. This seems to be a staggering sum. US personnel were well paid. But £5 would still be half a week's pay for a USAAF Captain.
- Versiones alternativasThe European version features topless and nude scenes with Joy Webster and Susan Hampshire. The original British release replaced these scenes with clothed versions, however it is the unclothed version that has been shown on UK television.
- ConexionesReferenced in Sidney J. Furie: Fire Up the Carousel!
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- How long is Night of Passion?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Night of Passion
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Walton Studios, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(studio: made at Walton Studios, Surrey, England)
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración1 hora 25 minutos
- Color
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By what name was During One Night (1960) officially released in Canada in English?
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