Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA young man employed by a cigarette factory is tired of his working class status and joins a gang planning to rob the factory warehouse.A young man employed by a cigarette factory is tired of his working class status and joins a gang planning to rob the factory warehouse.A young man employed by a cigarette factory is tired of his working class status and joins a gang planning to rob the factory warehouse.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Michael Sarne
- Ricky Flint
- (as Mike Sarne)
Paul Beradi
- Magistrates Court Official
- (não creditado)
Jim Brady
- Man Walking Through Market
- (não creditado)
Jimmy Charters
- Eastender Waving From Lorry
- (não creditado)
Steven Counterman
- Boy Throwing Stones at House
- (não creditado)
Maxwell Craig
- Man at Greyhound Stadium
- (não creditado)
J.G. Devlin
- Neighbour
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Very good story and fine acting from the dependable Rita T. And good evocation of late 50s/early 60s London.
After reading the first review of this film I was tempted to say that the reviewer should have gone to Specsavers. Talking about 'the lovely Rita Tushingham' made me think this. She may have been a good actress, but lovely she certainly wasn't. Mike Sarne used this film as a vehicle to prove that not only he couldn't sing, but couldn't act either. The one saving grace for me as someone who worked in Bethnal Green around this time the film was made was the jogging of my memory of streets, neighbourhood and people long gone. The sight of Doris Hare belittling Bernard Lee at the family meal table was as embarrassing as the bedroom clinch they later shared. The scene where Lee sets light to the Christmas decorations is just laughable and how Sarne and Tushingham spent time canoodling in a derelict bombed out building probably running alive with rats was as ridiculous as casting John Slater as the local gangster. Like Lee who played an escapologist (not a very good one at that)who struggled to free himself of the chains he was bound by, I couldn't get out of the cinema quick enough!
A PLACE TO GO is an odd little blend of the classic British kitchen sink social drama and the more old-fashioned crime thriller that was popular a decade before and still doing the rounds even in the early 1960s, although this is very much a last-gasp attempt with the burgeoning popularity of the spy genre soon wiping away the trend for safe cracking and night time robberies.
It works better as a kitchen sink film than a crime thriller, because the heist itself, although the best part of the movie, is dealt with very hurriedly and doesn't take up much of the running time. Instead the viewer is treated to a slice-of-life drama involving a poor working class family presided over by Bernard Lee, cast against type as a street performer with a Houdini-style breaking chain act!
Pop star Michael Sarne is the idealistic hero seeking to escape from his drab existence. He hooks up with the inimitable Rita Tushingham, who proves to be more than a match for his wiles as her character is full of life and rather independent. She's the best actor in the whole thing, certainly showing up Sarne as a rather bland leading man (at least we get the likes of John Slater and Roy Kinnear who are rather more fun in delivering mannered supporting characters). The feisty romance scenes are rather well handled, although the pacing is a little slow and the crime elements feel rather unnecessary and tacked on to the story. Still, it's a perfectly watchable film for lovers of the era.
It works better as a kitchen sink film than a crime thriller, because the heist itself, although the best part of the movie, is dealt with very hurriedly and doesn't take up much of the running time. Instead the viewer is treated to a slice-of-life drama involving a poor working class family presided over by Bernard Lee, cast against type as a street performer with a Houdini-style breaking chain act!
Pop star Michael Sarne is the idealistic hero seeking to escape from his drab existence. He hooks up with the inimitable Rita Tushingham, who proves to be more than a match for his wiles as her character is full of life and rather independent. She's the best actor in the whole thing, certainly showing up Sarne as a rather bland leading man (at least we get the likes of John Slater and Roy Kinnear who are rather more fun in delivering mannered supporting characters). The feisty romance scenes are rather well handled, although the pacing is a little slow and the crime elements feel rather unnecessary and tacked on to the story. Still, it's a perfectly watchable film for lovers of the era.
It is not so much about the crime story as the social culture that is documented in Bethnal Green in the mid 1960s.
This isn't swinging London, this is gritty down to earth poor London.
The living conditions, the workplace and the desire for something better drives this film into something more than just another B&W also ran compared with the likes of A Kind of Loving and Taste of Honey.
It is summed up with the mother's observations of her life as she walked with her son down the street at the end.
The washhouse is a particular eye opener. This was only 60 years ago.
This isn't swinging London, this is gritty down to earth poor London.
The living conditions, the workplace and the desire for something better drives this film into something more than just another B&W also ran compared with the likes of A Kind of Loving and Taste of Honey.
It is summed up with the mother's observations of her life as she walked with her son down the street at the end.
The washhouse is a particular eye opener. This was only 60 years ago.
Some excellent and vivid location work around Bethnal Green in London is the setting for this slice of "kitchen sink" life.It portrays a family struggling to keep their heads above the water as the man of the house Bernard Lee loses his job for being too mouthy at work, he then takes to the streets as an escapologist in order to get money for food on the table, quite often embarrassing himself and his family in the process. Meanwhile his son played by 60ts singing star Mike Sarne is fed up being on the breadline and turns to local gangster John Slater to do a robbery at the factory he works at, it goes wrong but he manages to get out of it in a hurry, meanwhile Sarne's love interest played by the lovely Rita Tushingham certainly is'nt an easy catch. All in all a really good slab of realism directed by the excellent Basil Dearden. Recommended.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesScenes for this film were shot at Clapton Greyhound Stadium. Clapton dog track opened 1928, closed 1974.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen Ricky 'borrows' his brother-in-law's lorry, the front left headlight isn't working. In the next shot it is and then isn't again subsequently.
This is quite possible, but in the UK post WW2 it was a requirement for headlights to operate on a 'dip and out' system where on full beam both lamps were lit, but on dip beam the kerbside lamp was turned off while the off side lamp was dipped but still illuminated.
- ConexõesFeatured in Welsh Greats: Doris Hare (2012)
- Trilhas sonorasA Place to Go
Music and Lyrics by Charles Blackwell
In Collaboration with Michael Sarne (as Mike Sarne)
Principais escolhas
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Bethnal Green
- Locações de filme
- Bethnal Green, Londres, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(studio: made on location in)
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- £ 155.000 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração1 hora 26 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was A Place to Go (1963) officially released in India in English?
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