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A Severed Head

  • 1971
  • R
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
457
YOUR RATING
A Severed Head (1971)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:26
1 Video
47 Photos
Dark ComedyComedy

The wine taster and merchant Martin Lynch-Gibbon is married to the shallow and spoiled Antonia Lynch-Gibbon, and loves his mistress Georgie Hands. Antonia is under therapy with Martin's best... Read allThe wine taster and merchant Martin Lynch-Gibbon is married to the shallow and spoiled Antonia Lynch-Gibbon, and loves his mistress Georgie Hands. Antonia is under therapy with Martin's best friend, the psychiatrist Palmer Anderson. One day, Antonia decides to ask for a divorce f... Read allThe wine taster and merchant Martin Lynch-Gibbon is married to the shallow and spoiled Antonia Lynch-Gibbon, and loves his mistress Georgie Hands. Antonia is under therapy with Martin's best friend, the psychiatrist Palmer Anderson. One day, Antonia decides to ask for a divorce from Martin, to live with Palmer, but they want to keep Martin as their friend. When Palmer... Read all

  • Director
    • Dick Clement
  • Writers
    • Iris Murdoch
    • J.B. Priestley
    • Frederic Raphael
  • Stars
    • Lee Remick
    • Richard Attenborough
    • Ian Holm
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    457
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Dick Clement
    • Writers
      • Iris Murdoch
      • J.B. Priestley
      • Frederic Raphael
    • Stars
      • Lee Remick
      • Richard Attenborough
      • Ian Holm
    • 13User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    A Severed Head
    Trailer 2:26
    A Severed Head

    Photos47

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Lee Remick
    Lee Remick
    • Antonia Lynch-Gibbon
    Richard Attenborough
    Richard Attenborough
    • Palmer Anderson
    Ian Holm
    Ian Holm
    • Martin Lynch-Gibbon
    Claire Bloom
    Claire Bloom
    • Honor Klein
    Jennie Linden
    Jennie Linden
    • Georgie Hands
    Clive Revill
    Clive Revill
    • Alexander Lynch-Gibbon
    Ann Firbank
    Ann Firbank
    • Rosemary Lynch-Gibbon
    Rosamund Greenwood
    Rosamund Greenwood
    • Miss Seelhaft
    Constance Lorne
    • Miss Hernshaw
    Robert Gillespie
    Robert Gillespie
    • Winking Patient
    Katherine Parr
    • Receptionist
    Nerys Hughes
    Nerys Hughes
    • Nurse
    Anne Jameson
    • Woman at Party
    • (as Ann Jameson)
    Yvette Rees
    Yvette Rees
    • Woman at Party
    Tommy Godfrey
    • Removal Man
    • (uncredited)
    Anthony Lang
    • 'Saint' at Party
    • (uncredited)
    Aileen Lewis
    • Lady at Private Members Club
    • (uncredited)
    Robin Parkinson
    • Drinks Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Dick Clement
    • Writers
      • Iris Murdoch
      • J.B. Priestley
      • Frederic Raphael
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    5.4457
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    10

    Featured reviews

    2malcolmgsw

    This is A Mystery

    This is a mystery not a comedy.How can the film makers make such a mess of anything written by Irish Murdoch and J.B.Priestley.If that wasn't bad enough to lumber it with such a dreadful title.No wonder the distributors put this on the shelf for a couple of years.Shameful waste of all the talent involved.No doubt Blooms top less scene was included to boost the box office.
    4henry8-3

    A Severed Head

    Focussed on Ian Holmes wine merchant, a group of bored middle class professionals fill their lives by having a series of doomed affairs with each other.

    Time has not been kind to this 'satire' based on Iris Murdoch's book. The characters are pretty much all detestable or plain daft and although Holmes brings the occasional smile to the face, the other characters particularly Attenborough and Remick are so unrealistic it's impossible to buy into what was presumably supposed to be sharp and biting.

    Firmer direction might have helped - overall, sloppy.
    4JamesHitchcock

    Iris Murdoch Deserved Better Than this

    Although Iris Murdoch was one of the most distinguished British novelists of the second half of the twentieth century, her work has been almost completely ignored by the cinema. "A Severed Head" is the only one of her twenty-six novels to have been made into a feature film. (Two others, "An Unofficial Rose" and "The Bell", have been serialised for television).

    The story, a study of adultery among the wealthy upper middle classes of London, put me in mind of Dorothy Parker's celebrated bon mot about the Bloomsbury Group, namely that they lived in squares and loved in triangles, although you would need a more complicated figure than the humble triangle to do justice to the amatory geometry of Iris Murdoch's characters. Martin Lynch-Gibbon, a well-to-do wine merchant, thinks that he has it all- plenty of money, a house in an exclusive part of London, a beautiful wife, Antonia, and a beautiful younger mistress, Georgie. Martin's world, however, is rocked when Antonia informs him that she wants a divorce. The reason is not Martin's affair with Georgie; at this stage in the proceedings Antonia is still unaware of his infidelity. The reason is that Antonia herself has been having an affair with her psychoanalyst Palmer Anderson, a good friend of Martin.

    The film then chronicles the various developments and revelations ensuing from Antonia's announcement. These involve Martin, Antonia, Palmer, Georgie and two further characters, Martin's brother Alexander, a sculptor, and Palmer's half-sister Honor Klein, a lecturer in anthropology at Cambridge. Although the film is based on a short novel, of only just over two hundred pages in my edition, there is certainly insufficient space in this review to set out all the plot twists. The characters in the novel, and this is reflected in the film as well, see themselves as "civilised", a word which for them means "blasé about sexual misconduct"- something else they have in common with the Bloomsbury group, who likewise prided themselves on their ability to rise above conventional morality, at least as far as sex is concerned. Palmer is particularly concerned that everyone involved in the tangled web of relationships should be as "civilised" as possible, even when their activities stray into illegal territory. (Besides his affair with Antonia, Palmer is also sleeping with Honor. He claims that because she is only his half-sister they are not committing incest, but the law would not recognise that as a defence).

    Watching the film made me realise a possible reason why Murdoch is not the cinema's favourite author. An outline of her plots might make them seem like standard "adultery in Hampstead" literary fare, but actually they are a lot more complicated than that. Murdoch mades great use of visual and verbal imagery and raises complex psychological and philosophical themes. It can be difficult for film-makers to find a cinematic equivalent to these matters, and the makers of "A Severed Head" never really seem to try.

    A couple of examples will show what I mean. The action of the novel takes place in December and January, and the weather plays an important part. The earlier scenes take place against a backdrop of mist, haze or dense fog. Towards the end of the novel, however, the weather clears, and fog and haze give way to sunlight. Murdoch's descriptions of the weather are not simply coincidental; they also have symbolic importance, representing Martin's progress from ignorance towards knowledge. The film-makers, however, do not seem to have realised this point, and shot the whole film in summer sunshine.

    In the novel the image of the "severed head" has a number of interlinked meanings, too complicated to set out here. The film script keeps Murdoch's title, but makes no attempt to explain the complex meaning which she gives it, with the result that viewers will probably be baffled why the film is called that. I can, however, reassure those who dislike gore and bloodshed in the movies that nobody's head actually gets severed, although one character does threaten another with a sword.

    The novel is told in the first person, with Martin as narrator, and can be seen as his journey from a complacent hedonism to a growing awareness that life is not always as simple as his "civilised" system of values and that he cannot just dismiss morality as an irrelevance. He is not in love with either Antonia or Georgie, but carries on his double life because it suits his purposes, without ever considering the emotional cost to the two women. The film dispenses with a narrator and also with much of Murdoch's more serious themes; it ends up like a Brian Rix style bedroom farce interspersed with occasional more serious moments such as an attempted suicide.

    The result is a filleting of Murdoch's novel with much of her meaning removed. There are some well-known actors such as Richard Attenborough, Lee Remick and Claire Bloom among the cast, but none of them seem to be making much effort. "A Severed Head" is not my favourite Murdoch novel, but it deserved a better adaptation than this. Perhaps it is as well that the cinema has steered clear of Murdoch since 1971. 4/10.
    4leavymusic-2

    Well

    Considering the talent within this movie it fails to satisfy feelings much other than of disappointment & boredom. Rather pointless story of several people falling in and out of love.
    10leogrrrl01

    Wonderful movie

    One of my favorite movies ever, largely due to the fact that Iris Murdoch is my favorite author of all time. I saw this as a fairly young child, and it stuck in my head for years. Two of the best actresses ever, Claire Bloom and Lee Remick. Claire was perfect as Honor, like a tightly wound spring. The relationship between Honor and her brother is pure Iris Murdoch, whose characters always had complicated and sometimes quite twisted relationships. Very funny movie, as well, as is also typical of Ms. Murdoch's works.

    I would highly recommend this movie to young adult audiences who like alternative and artistic, literary movies.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Frederic Raphael wrote the screenplay for this movie in 1967, two years before it was made, and was paid a fee of $210,000, in those days about £75,000. This made him the highest-paid screenwriter in British movies. His fee was so large that the budget could not afford anything like as much for a director. Michael Winner was considered, but his then-standard fee of $75,000 (about £26,500) was too large for the producers to be able to afford him.
    • Goofs
      The main actor drives a car with the wheel at left. It is very unusual a car in Britain not having the wheel at right.
    • Quotes

      Honor Klein: You think you're being civilised - I think you're a coward.

      Martin Lynch-Gibbon: Well at least I'm a civilised coward.

      Honor Klein: I'm not at all sure you really want your wife back.

      Martin Lynch-Gibbon: And I'm not at all sure if I care if you're at all sure, thanks all the same.

    • Crazy credits
      The opening credits feature the main characters as children's dolls in a series of vignettes mounted on a turntable.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Un shérif à New York: Top of the World, Ma! (1971)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 21, 1971 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Affairs and Relations
    • Filming locations
      • Edgware Road, Paddington, London, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures Corporation
      • Winkast Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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