Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Biography and Career Notes
- Introduction: ‘Two on a Tandem’? Dearden and Relph: Authorship and British Cinema
- 1 Apprenticeship and Beyond: Comedy Traditions and Film Design
- 2 The Formative Period: The War Years and the Ethos of Ealing
- 3 Dramas of Masculine Adjustment I: Tragic Melodramas
- 4 Dramas of Masculine Adjustment II: Men in Action
- 5 Dramas of Social Tension and Adjustment
- 6 Ethical Dilemmas
- 7 The International Years
- Appendix: ‘Inside Ealing’: Michael Relph
- Filmography
- Bibliography
- Index
4 - Dramas of Masculine Adjustment II: Men in Action
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Biography and Career Notes
- Introduction: ‘Two on a Tandem’? Dearden and Relph: Authorship and British Cinema
- 1 Apprenticeship and Beyond: Comedy Traditions and Film Design
- 2 The Formative Period: The War Years and the Ethos of Ealing
- 3 Dramas of Masculine Adjustment I: Tragic Melodramas
- 4 Dramas of Masculine Adjustment II: Men in Action
- 5 Dramas of Social Tension and Adjustment
- 6 Ethical Dilemmas
- 7 The International Years
- Appendix: ‘Inside Ealing’: Michael Relph
- Filmography
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Out of the Clouds (1955); The Ship that Died of Shame (1955); The League of Gentlemen (1960) and Man in the Moon (1960)
Dearden's men are often at their happiest in action, dressed appropriately, and it is through the loss of action that their anxiety or distress is suggested – the most poignantly felt lack is that of an appropriate arena of action, and this is the major narrative premise of several films.
(Pat Kirkham and Janet Thumim 1997: 100)What sort of men were we, that the war had been so good to us and the peace so rotten?
(Nicholas Monsarrat 1961)If Dearden and Relph's films after the war often exploited the form of the tragic melodrama to explore masculine adjustment and responses to the changing social circumstances of the post-war world, in a small number of films they also constructed an alternative trope for exploring this central issue: narratives of men after action – seeking action. These films are sometimes marked by a tragic dimension, but the films are more substantially determined by their exploration of stories of men asserting – or reasserting – their masculinity through professional, physical action; usually in an all-male group. Masculine purpose and identity are temporarily rediscovered and reinvigorated through a reconstitution of wartime experience; and the crisis is often transgressive, most obviously in tempting the men towards crime in an attempt to rediscover excitement, regain a sense of purpose, re-establish male bonding and challenge the perceived feminisation of society after the war.
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- The Cinema of Basil Dearden and Michael Relph , pp. 167 - 202Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2009