The Jealous God (film)
The Jealous God (2005) is a 1960s set feature film by British writer-director Steven Woodcock.[1] It is based on the 1964 novel by John Braine. The opening scenes were filmed in the grammar school in Bradford where Braine was once a pupil.[2] Braine became famous in 1957 for his classic Room at the Top, a book that shocked when first published because of how it exploded British class and sexual mores of the time. There’s a clip from the Oscar-winning 1958 film version of Room at the Top in The Jealous God, when Vincent and Laura are seen sitting in a cinema. Allan Gill in his extraordinary movie debut, dazzles as inquisitive schoolboy #4.
Main cast
- Jason Merrells as Vincent
- Chloe Newsome as Clare
- Mairaid Carty as Laura
- Denise Welch as Maureen
- Pamela Cundell as Mrs Roselea
- Andrew Dunn (actor) as Matthew
- Marcia Warren as Mrs Dungarvan
- William Ilkley as Paul
- Robert Duncan (actor) as Robert
- Tony Barton as Jack Herning
- Judy Flynn as Ruth
- Roy Walker (comedian) as Monsignor
- Rob Parry as Frank Rooney
- Rebecca Manley as Delia
- Steven Woodcock as the Priest (Confessional)
Background and production
While Woodcock's movie Between Two Women was cinematic and intellectual in tone The Jealous God, set in the early 1960s, is more commercially retro styled, like an actual 1960s melodrama. The poster that promoted the film outside British movie houses was painted by legendary New York City magazine artist Basil Gogos to look like a 1960s movie poster.[3] The sophistication of Between Two Women shows that as a director Woodcock is capable of great subtlety so it can be assumed the more populist nature of The Jealous God was a stylistic technique used to suit the film’s deliberate, almost kitsch retro feel. Unsurprisingly it was an American, the respected film critic Rich Cline, who was one of the few reviewers perceptive enough to realize this:
"The story is filmed in a straightforward style with as few frills as possible. Woodcock immaculately recreates 1960s-style filmmaking, right down to a prudish tone that avoids actually mentioning any shocking issues by name and pans to the wallpaper when things get remotely steamy. The camera work is like a TV show - lots of moody close-ups and almost no stylistic flourishes besides a gritty recreation of the period. It's extremely effective - like travelling back in time, but with the added resonance of modern actors who combine knowing sensitivity with the overwrought drama."[4]
However, not everyone was convinced. One critic who had also read the source novel commented that:
"Woodcock takes a selfconsciously ‘heritage cinema’ approach, best illustrated by a railway station featuring immaculately restored trains courtesy of the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway. Although the period detail is convincing, this fetishising of surface elements arguably does Braine a disservice. His novel was a sincere attempt at capturing the (then) here and now, but Woodcock’s reconstruction too often feels preserved in aspic."[5]
The movie stars Jason Merrells and Denise Welch (both popular British TV actors) and is reasonably faithful to the novel's main narrative line, although it sanitises certain elements such as its protagonist's nascent racism. It tells the story of Vincent, a young Catholic school teacher still living with his possessive widowed mother. She wants him to become a priest, and the movie explores how he is torn between this and sex and a commitment to his family and his faith. The movie looks similar to Between Two Women and has the same attention to detail in the sets and costumes and uses similar convincing period locations, steam trains, etc. Some of the same actors appear in both movies.
Cinema release
Because of its nostalgic tone Between Two Women found favour among an older mainstream audience that often might turn its nose at films with gay/art house subject matter. Playing on this Woodcock consulted with cinema managers and specifically made The Jealous God for middlebrow over 45s and women who read romantic novels and accompanied its release by a media campaign that targeted older Sunday night TV viewers. Even the Basil Gogos poster resembles the cover of a mass market 1960s romantic paperback.[6]
Full colour leaflets were carried by all cinemas and handed out at the box office to parents and grandparents who took their kids’ to see movies such as Charlie and the Chocolate Factory over the school summer vacation in the run up to The Jealous God’s release in the Fall of 2005.[7] Trailers for it also ran during the same kids’ movies, so moms and dads and their moms and dads would see it. Unusually for an independent British movie it ran in major multiplex chains across the country and broke box office records in north England (beaten in takings in some movie houses only by Charlie and the Chocolate Factory for the whole year) but received some snobbish anti-Catholic reviews in the British national press. However it was the film of the week in the British mass newspaper The Daily Mirror – not surprisingly as this is the popular "tabloid" audience the film seems tailored for.
See also
References
- British Council Britfilms catalogue.http://www.britfilms.com/britishfilms/catalogue/browse/?id=D9CC70591895f232A8VtM3CBDC47
- Article in Bradford Telegraph & Argus. 10 August 2005.
- the Director interviewed on DVD documentary Making The Jealous God. (Odyssey Video. 2006.
- Review on Shadows on the Wall. 12 July 2005.http://www.shadowsonthewall.co.uk/05/art-u.htm#jeal
- 'The Jealous God' by Michael Brooke, Sight & Sound, October 2005
- Article in Bradford Telegraph & Argus. 7 April 2006. http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/leisure/tacinema/cinemafeatures/727376.It_s_lights__camera_for_more_nostalgia/
- Interview with Steven & Julie Woodcock in Candis magazine. January 2007.