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IMDbPro

If....

  • 1968
  • 12
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
26K
YOUR RATING
Malcolm McDowell and David Wood in If.... (1968)
In this allegorical story, a revolution led by pupil Mick Travis takes place at an old established private school in England.
Play trailer2:31
1 Video
99+ Photos
Dark ComedyCrimeDrama

In this allegorical story, a revolution led by pupil Mick Travis takes place at an old established private school in England.In this allegorical story, a revolution led by pupil Mick Travis takes place at an old established private school in England.In this allegorical story, a revolution led by pupil Mick Travis takes place at an old established private school in England.

  • Director
    • Lindsay Anderson
  • Writers
    • David Sherwin
    • John Howlett
  • Stars
    • Malcolm McDowell
    • David Wood
    • Richard Warwick
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    26K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lindsay Anderson
    • Writers
      • David Sherwin
      • John Howlett
    • Stars
      • Malcolm McDowell
      • David Wood
      • Richard Warwick
    • 201User reviews
    • 126Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 BAFTA Awards
      • 2 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:31
    Trailer

    Photos100

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    Top cast39

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    Malcolm McDowell
    Malcolm McDowell
    • Mick - Crusader
    David Wood
    David Wood
    • Johnny - Crusader
    Richard Warwick
    Richard Warwick
    • Wallace - Crusader
    Christine Noonan
    Christine Noonan
    • The Girl - Crusader
    Rupert Webster
    • Bobby Philips - Crusader
    Robert Swann
    • Rowntree - Whip
    Hugh Thomas
    • Denson - Whip
    Michael Cadman
    • Fortinbras - Whip
    Peter Sproule
    • Barnes - Whip
    Peter Jeffrey
    Peter Jeffrey
    • Headmaster - Staff
    Anthony Nicholls
    Anthony Nicholls
    • General Denson - Staff
    Arthur Lowe
    Arthur Lowe
    • Mr. Kemp - Staff
    Mona Washbourne
    Mona Washbourne
    • Matron - Staff
    Mary MacLeod
    Mary MacLeod
    • Mrs. Kemp - Staff
    • (as Mary Macleod)
    Geoffrey Chater
    Geoffrey Chater
    • Chaplain - Staff
    Ben Aris
    • John Thomas - Staff
    Graham Crowden
    Graham Crowden
    • History Master - Staff
    Charles Lloyd Pack
    • Classics Master - Staff
    • Director
      • Lindsay Anderson
    • Writers
      • David Sherwin
      • John Howlett
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews201

    7.426K
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    Featured reviews

    10maureenmcqueen

    Love And Anger

    This glorious 1968 film is a document not just of its times but of the eternal and mysterious communion between two enormous artists. Lindsay Anderson, the director, the mentor, the older man and Malcolm McDowell his young, brilliant, loving disciple. The trust between this two men is overwhelming and the results are in every frame in every nuance. For me, to see this film after many years was a remarkable emotional experience. Daring, visionary with a Malcolm McDowell that broke new ground with the fearlessness of an explorer venturing into totally virgin territory. Brilliant, beautiful, unique. Lead by the magical hand of Anderson and McDowell we confront the anger of the artists with their love for each other. Wow!
    ng271

    Just utterly,utterly marvellous

    My word!

    "If.." has always been a firm favourite of mine, particularly as I have been in much the same situation (minus B+W/Colour changes, and gun battles, naturally), and indeed still consider myself a hair rebel. It captures perfectly the horrors of public shool-The fawning, smarmy head-master, the rigors of cadet training and founder's day, it's all drawn from horrible reality.

    Saw a late night showing yesterday, and on the cinema screen the fabulous direction and power of the photography- so still and unobtrusive, yet so iconic-becomes apparent. That final looped shot of Mick firing the brenn Gun is just stunning! I left the cinema feeling so goddamn moved!

    At times the sheer 60s-ness, and random dialogue ("I like Johnny") can seem to undermine the viewing experience, but the spirit of bold rebellion which saturates this marvelous film wins you over. A favourite joke which I had never spotted before, is near the start, where the whips tick off a list that goes something like "Measles, tape worm, conformation class"..marvellous..

    GO SEE!!
    10duffjerroldorg

    Anderson and McDowell - A revolution.

    I was in a sort of daze for hours after seeing If...for the first time in 2017. A work of art? Certainly but also a poetic historical document. After all the film dates back to 1968. 1968! when things were really changing and youth was taking a step forward, reminding the older generation that we'll be suffering the consequences of your thoughtlessness. So move over or else. I remember my father despising this film, he call it, propaganda. Propaganda?Maybe that's why I never saw it, until now. I was really moved by the film. Malcolm McDowell is the perfect man to incarnate the revolution that was about to come. It also made me look for all of Lindsay Anderson films - Just half a dozen feature films but my God! What an extraordinary director.
    9Galina_movie_fan

    "Don't forget boy Look over your shoulder 'Cause there's always someone coming after you"

    The first entry to the Mick Travis trilogy ("If...", 1968, O Lucky Man, 1973, and "Britannia Hospital", 1982), "If.." is a surreal black comedy about an English private boys' school and a student rebellion. In his three films, Anderson had covered all aspects, politics, and institutions of British Society from 1968 to 1982 with its complex system of class differences and privileges. "If..." which was released in 1968 at the peak of youthful rebellion in Europe and USA, received BAFTA and Golden Globe nominations and won the Golden Palm at the Cannes Film Festival where it competed with 27 films from all over the world.

    Anderson was in part inspired by Jean Vigo's 41 minutes long "Zero for conduct" (1933) about the similar to "If..." subject. Like in Vigo's film, Anderson inserts some surrealistic episodes shot in black-and-white and according to him, it was driven by budget rather than style. Malcolm McDowell in his first big screen role and the first of three Mick Travis' movies is a charismatic leader of the rebel students who call themselves the Crusaders and like to break the rules. The cruel corporal punishments from the faculty and the older students provoked a bloody uprising against the school system.

    Made almost 40 years ago, "If.." still has a power to shock as well as to entertain and it remains an outstanding and controversial depiction of the problems that have not disappear from the English public school system or from any school system as well as from society in general.

    I am sure that Stanley Kubrick saw "If..." and was impressed by McDowell's debut performance, by his charisma that shines through his close-ups and especially in the final shot of "If...", and by his face that strangely combines innocence and youthful openness with cynical scornful almost reptilian contempt for humanity. I believe that "If..." was the reason Kubrick offered the part of charming psychopath Alex to the young actor.
    8AW_McGOWAN

    Defying and (Re)Defining British Culture

    Lindsay Anderson's "If...." begins rather slow, establishing itself as a typical boarding school drama, as students arrive and get into routine at a 500-year-old public school in Britain. In the second half, though, the film takes a turn for the surreal, becoming a dreamlike dark comedy with cultural relevance and artistic wonder.

    Watching "If...'s" first few scenes, we expect that the main character will be a first-year student at the school who adapts to the institution's rigorous standards and social hierarchies. However, it slowly becomes apparent that our protagonist is actually an upperclassman named Mick Travis (Malcolm McDowell).

    With his two loyal friends Johnny (David Wood) and Wallace (Richard Warwick), Mick refuses to conform to the school's conservative agenda. Late in their academic career, the trio decides to give into their rebellious desires, relishing in rule breaking and defying the school's snootier patrons.

    The film is thus a commentary on 1960s British counterculture just as much as it itself is a product of that revolution. Mick, Johnny, and Wallace reflect the time's rebellious youth as the rock-n-roll generation turning against society's archaic norms. Meanwhile, the movie partakes in the same counterculture as a piece of subversive art. The surrealist sequences, experimental editing, sexual undertones, and nudity all go against traditional British cinema to offer something novel, and perhaps even appalling for the formalists.

    One of the most blatantly defiant methods that Lindsay Anderson endorses is the use of both black-and-white and color film in the same movie. Timing and lighting restraints initially forced Anderson to use black-and-white when filming in the school's chapel. Allegedly, he liked the effect so much that he decided to shoot additional scenes in the outmoded style. There's no telling why Anderson chose certain scenes for color and others for black-and-white, but the nonconformist blend aids the movie's dreaminess. The audience wonders what is real and what is depraved fantasy.

    Malcolm McDowell certainly stands out for his performance as Mick. In fact, McDowell is so convincing as a rebel that this performance led to Stanley Kubrick casting him as the lead in "A Clockwork Orange." McDowell also reprised Mick in two additional Anderson films: 1973's "O Lucky Man!" and 1982's "Britannia Hospital." The character has been hailed as an "everyman," and he certainly has our attention, empathy, and support all throughout "If...."

    An unfortunate outcome of that support, however, comes at the film's ending. The finale is climactic and in an odd way satisfying, but has aged horrendously. Without giving too much away, I will say that the denouement involves Mick, his friends, the school, and some guns. In the current age, it is hard to cheer the characters on through such a conclusion, given the real-world relevance of gun violence in schools.

    None of this is to say that Anderson is at fault for finishing the movie in this way. In 1968, he could not have imagined the weight this ending might someday carry. Also, the conclusion is not necessarily inappropriate watching it today, but it is definitely darker. We can no longer champion Mick's rebellion in its entirety, but must come to terms with its limits and morality after the screen goes black.

    Regardless of the lens we see it through, "If...." is an overlooked movie in British (film) history. While it might retain interest from scholars and critics, the general public - at least in America - has sadly forgotten it. Such is a shame, for it is a brilliant piece of cinema that acutely captures the light and dark sides of a pivotal transition in modern Western civilization.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      A British ambassador called the film "an insult to the nation". The then Lord John Brabourne read an early draft and called it "the most evil and perverted script I've ever read. It must never see the light of day".
    • Goofs
      When Mick is standing in front of the Trueform shoe store, the camera and crew members are seen reflected in the windows of a passing bus.
    • Quotes

      Mick Travis: One man can change the world with a bullet in the right place.

    • Crazy credits
      The film's opening prologue states: Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding PROVERBS IV:7
    • Alternate versions
      In the USA, the film was originally released uncut, with an X rating. However, a more commercial rating was preferred and the film was reissued with an R rating after scenes of male frontal nudity were removed from the shower scenes.
    • Connections
      Featured in Horizont (1971)
    • Soundtracks
      Sanctus
      from the "Missa Luba" (Philips Recording)

      Sung by Les Troubadours du Roi Baudouin (uncredited)

      Conducted by Fr. Guido Haazen O.F.M (uncredited)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is If....?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 21, 1969 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Latin
    • Also known as
      • If
    • Filming locations
      • Cheltenham College, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England, UK(location)
    • Production company
      • Memorial Enterprises
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 51m(111 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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