The Romantic Englishwoman is a 1975 British film directed by Joseph Losey and starring Michael Caine, Glenda Jackson, Helmut Berger. It marks the feature-length screen debut for Kate Nelligan. The screenplay was written by Tom Stoppard and Thomas Wiseman.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2021) |
The Romantic Englishwoman | |
---|---|
Directed by | Joseph Losey |
Written by | Tom Stoppard Thomas Wiseman |
Produced by | Daniel M. Angel |
Starring | Michael Caine Glenda Jackson Helmut Berger |
Cinematography | Gerry Fisher |
Edited by | Reginald Beck |
Music by | Richard Hartley |
Production companies | Dial Films Les Productions Meric-Matalon |
Distributed by | Fox-Rank |
Release date | 19 May 1975 |
Running time | 115 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Caine plays a successful English novelist whose discontented wife, played by Jackson, decides to take a holiday to Germany in order to "find herself". There she meets a mysterious young man, played by Berger, in an elevator, which initiates an often bizarre, but extremely mature examination of desire, responsibility and the nature of love.
The film was shown at the 1975 Cannes Film Festival, but not entered into the main competition.[1]
Elizabeth, bored wife of Lewis, a successful pulp writer in England, leaves husband and child and runs away to the German town of Baden-Baden. There she meets Thomas, who claims to be a poet but whom viewers know to be a petty thief, conman, drug courier, and gigolo. Though the two are briefly attracted to each other, she returns home. He, hunted by gangsters for a drug consignment he has lost, follows her to England. Lewis, highly suspicious of his wife, invites the young man to stay with them and act as his secretary. Initially resenting the presence of the handsome stranger, Elizabeth one night starts an affair and, after being caught together in the conservatory by Lewis, the two run away with no money to the south of France. Lewis follows them, he in turn being followed by the gangsters looking for Thomas. At the end the gangsters reclaim Thomas, presumably for execution, while Lewis reclaims Elizabeth.
Films directed by Joseph Losey | |
---|---|
|
| |
---|---|
List of awards and nominations | |
Stage plays |
|
Radio plays |
|
Screenplays |
|
This article related to a British film of the 1970s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |