Monthly Archives: November 2025

  • The Choral

    Nicholas Hytner (2025)

    In television work of the 1970s and 1980s, Alan Bennett often collaborated with directors who already were or soon would be accomplished filmmakers – Lindsay Anderson, Stephen Frears and John Schlesinger are three names that immediately come to mind.  Cinema versions of Bennett’s later stage work have been in the hands of directors who are big names in theatre but less effective behind a camera.  Richard Eyre directed the film of Allelujah (2022), Bennett’s most recent stage play; before then, Nicholas Hytner was at the helm for The Madness of King George (1994), The History Boys (2006) and The Lady in the Van (2015).  Hytner is back for The Choral, not an adaptation from the stage but the first original screenplay that Bennett has written for cinema since A Private Function (1984), and which is showing at the London Film Festival before its imminent general release.  As comedy, The Choral is far from subtle; as drama, usually clumsy; yet the film is affecting, too.

    The Choral is set in South Yorkshire during the First World War, a combination of place and time used by Bennett in the first television drama he ever wrote, A Day Out (directed by Stephen Frears and originally shown on BBC in 1972).  Strictly speaking, this wasn’t a Great War story:  none of the action happens between 1914 and 1918; the outing of the title is a ride by men from the Halifax cycling club to and from Fountains Abbey, one Sunday in the summer of 1911.  Yet a viewer’s realisation that the cyclists may soon be soldiers in the trenches ensures that the coming conflict shadows the piece throughout; A Day Out ends in 1919, when some of the same group gather at a war memorial to pay their respects to former companions who didn’t survive.  The Choral is more straightforwardly a World War I tale, which takes place in a fictional small town, Ramsden, close to a real, bigger one, Huddersfield.  (The village of Saltaire and its environs were the main shooting locations.)  It’s 1916, and the local choral society is struggling to keep up numbers.  Many of their male voices are serving in the armed forces.  The choir’s star tenor, Clyde, is missing in action and presumed dead.  When their chorus master (Thomas Howes) decides it’s his patriotic duty to join up the society urgently needs to find a replacement.

    The early sequences announce what’s in store.  Two teenagers, Ellis (Taylor Uttley) and Lofty (Oliver Brinscombe), head on their bikes into Ramsden from the surrounding countryside.  ‘England,’ declares Ellis, ‘we’re fodder for the mill, and we’ll be fodder for the Front’.  Lofty already wears uniform:  he’s a telegram boy, the deliverer of bad news to women in Ramsden’s terraced streets.  The sight of a good-looking girl, Mary Lockwood (Amara Okereke), causes Ellis and Lofty to change direction and follow her, never mind Mary’s Salvation Army uniform, into a parish hall where the choir is holding auditions for new members.  The man in charge is Alderman Duxbury (Roger Allam), choir stalwart and sponsor, and mill owner.  He reprimands another young auditionee, Mitch (Shaun Thomas), for his unkempt appearance.  ‘I’ve come straight from work at t’mill,’ Mitch explains, ‘Oose mill?’ demands Duxbury, ‘Yours’, says Mitch.  A bit later, Duxbury and other senior men in the choir – an undertaker (Alun Armstrong), a vicar (Ron Cook) and a portrait photographer (Mark Addy) – discuss who might be approached as choirmaster, and the name of Dr Henry Guthrie comes up.  Guthrie is highly rated as a musician, but he has ‘peculiarities’ (it’s somehow known he’s homosexual) and has only just returned to England after living and working abroad – in Germany, of all places.  He’s an atheist, to boot, although, as the man-of-the-world photographer points out, ‘There are atheists now – there’s one in Bradford’.

    That last line raises a smile.  The other dialogue quoted above, reasonably typical of the script overall, seems rather desperate – that goes for Duxbury’s dim sitcom bit with Mitch, as much as Ellis’s clunky political history point-making.  More of the latter is to follow – as when one of the women in the story announces there’ll be no more wars once women get the vote.  Clyde’s sweetheart, Bella (Emily Fairn), herself a choir member, has assumed he’s dead and has her eye on someone new.  When Clyde (Jacob Dudman), alive and well but minus one arm, turns up at her front door, Bella faints, convincingly; once she comes to, she unconvincingly makes clear to Clyde that he’s a thing of the past.  Alan Bennett doesn’t supply enough reason for the choir’s old guard to swallow their prejudices and engage Guthrie (Ralph Fiennes).  After uneasily accepting their offer and, with his right-hand man, the pianist Robert Horner (Robert Emms), in tow, Guthrie embarks on a vocal talent-spotting tour of unexpected places in Ramsden – a hospital, a baker’s shop, and so on.  We might as well be watching one of Gareth Malone’s TV choir-making efforts, except that the follow-up on those is tidier than it is here:  a trio of men in the hospital who sing ‘Three Little Maids’ from The Mikado quite pleasantly, aren’t seen or heard of again.

    The line about Bradford’s atheist raises a smile not because it’s brilliant but because it’s so recognisably Bennett and makes you grateful to and for him.  What’s more remarkable about the film is that who its author is, at one level eclipses much of what’s wrong with it.  Alan Bennett is ninety-one now.  It’s not only amazing that he wrote this screenplay at all; The Choral is also worthwhile as a testament to Bennett’s political views in old age.  The awkward conception of Guthrie as a gay Germanophile reflects the writer’s furious despair about British intolerance more than a century on from the era that he’s describing.  Linking xenophobia in Brexit Britain to provincial hatred of all things Hun at a time when the country was at war with Germany, is a very dubious connection to make, but it seems genuinely to express what Bennett now feels.

    Guthrie reminds Duxbury et al of German composers’ dominance in the choral music canon.  To meet these dismayed choir elders halfway, Guthrie approaches Elgar, with whom he’s acquainted, for permission to do The Dream of Gerontius.  Permission is given to perform the piece but not for the interpretive liberties eventually taken by the Ramsden choir.  Alderman Duxbury is used to getting the plum tenor solo, but his vocal limitations are only too evident to Guthrie.  Clyde, on the other hand, sings wonderfully; and because it’s young men, not old, who are losing their lives in the War, why not turn the dying Gerontius into Clyde, wearing his own soldier’s uniform, and the guardian angel of Gerontius’ soul into a nurse, also in uniform, to be sung by Mary Lockwood (who emerges as the choir’s best female voice)?  When Mary discovers that, on the very day of the choir’s concert in the town hall, Elgar will be receiving an honorary doctorate, across the Pennines, from the University of Manchester[1], she writes to the great man, inviting him to call in at Ramsden if he can spare the time.  Elgar (Simon Russell Beale) duly arrives, in honorand’s robes and a chauffeured car, but is incandescent to learn how Gerontius has been adapted – in his view, travestied.  Withdrawing permission for the performance, he sweeps off in high dudgeon – though not before pointing out that he had lunch the other day with Field Marshal Haig, who assured Elgar the war would be over by Christmas.

    It seems surprising that the composer of the music that supplies the film with much of its emotional heft, is portrayed so negatively, but Elgar’s mention of Haig is significant.  Over-by-Christmas complacency in England extended far beyond Haig – and well before 1916 – but Bennett, picking up on Ellis’s cannon fodder remark in the opening scene, is evidently keen to skewer the British establishment of which Elgar, as much as Haig, was part.  Bennett has spoken publicly about becoming more socialist in old age, about his anger with the policies of New Labour as well as Tory administrations, and that the British class system dies hard.  Here, too, The Choral matters because of how it conveys Bennett’s views, even though that’s obviously not a valid measure of dramatic quality.  The elements in the film that do amount to real quality are the work of some of the cast, especially Ralph Fiennes.

    Henry Guthrie is first seen languishing at a hotel lounge piano, the only work he’s been able to get since returning to England.  Once Guthrie starts work with the Ramsden choir, Fiennes gives an admirable impression of a professional musician, marking up a score, reacting to the voices of choir members he’s hearing for the first time, and so on.  A choir practice is interrupted by the arrival of news that the German ship Pommern has been sunk in the Battle of Jutland, with the loss of all men on board.  Everyone in the parish hall goes into raucous celebration, and join in ‘God Save the King’, except for Guthrie and Horner, who knows that the hundreds of ‘Fritzes’ on the Pommern included Guthrie’s German lover.  Fiennes stands, silent and still:  his absorption of the news quite transcends the scene’s obvious conception.  Even more emotionally potent is an exchange between Guthrie and Clyde, when the older man urges the younger to rejoin the choir.  Sad, bitter Clyde doesn’t think he can face seeing Bella at rehearsals; Guthrie talks of the transformative power of art, which he also describes as ‘insensitive’.  Guthrie tells Clyde his singing gifts offer him a second chance in life.  Many men, he continues, choosing his words with perhaps deliberate insensitivity, ‘would give their right arm’ to have Clyde’s voice.  Guthrie admits that ‘Life is shit … so sing!’  This melancholy, tormented man follows hot on the heels of the anguished cardinal Ralph Fiennes played in last year’s Conclave.  He needs to guard against being typecast as a sufferer for a second phase in his career, but he’s marvellous here.

    The conversation between Clyde and Guthrie, well played by Jacob Dudman as well as by Fiennes, is one of Bennett’s best pieces of writing in The Choral.  One of the worst, which probably no actor could redeem, also involves Clyde.  For the choir establishment, the downside of The Dream of Gerontius is noxious fumes of Catholicism whirling round the libretto, courtesy of John Henry Newman.  When Ron Cook’s parson reminds Guthrie and the choir that ‘there’s no such place as purgatory in the Church of England’, Clyde yells back, ‘No such place as purgatory?  I’ll tell you where purgatory is!’ and proceeds, wordily, to do just that:  to cut a long story short, purgatory is no man’s land between the trench lines.  Other than when they’re faced with irredeemable speeches like this one, the cast delivers rather more than the script deserves.  Alderman Duxbury is given a tragic backstory – his son has been killed in the War and Duxbury’s wife (Eunice Roberts) is marooned in grief – but, even before that’s revealed, Roger Allam nuances much of what he’s given to say.

    Casting an actor of colour as Mary Lockwood is annoying because Amara Okereke is virtually the only such actor in sight.  If the filmmakers were genuinely committed to colour-blind casting, why aren’t there at least a few more Black actors as choir members or other Ramsden locals?  Until her mother (uncredited on IMDb) briefly appears late on, Mary is the community’s lone Black, whose Salvation Army garb makes her doubly conspicuous.  That said, Amara Okereke plays her charmingly and sings beautifully (it seems most of the cast did their own singing).  Mark Addy is characteristically likeable as the photographer but the standout performance, after Ralph Fiennes’, comes from Robert Emms as Horner.  It no doubt helps that his dialogues with Guthrie, with whom Horner shares ‘an unspeakable affection’, are consistently subtler than most in the film.  Whereas the two men adapt Gerontius to make the title character a young man, Emms is the embodiment of a kind of reverse process.  He’ll be forty next year, somewhat older than Horner is probably meant to be, but his pale face and skinniness, which may well have restricted the range of roles he has so far had, allow Emms to pass for younger.  As a conscientious objector, Horner attends a military tribunal:  his three interrogators (Oliver Chris, Malcolm Sinclair and Fenella Woolgar) are all crude caricatures but Emms, as well as the man he’s playing, survives this ordeal with distinction.  This is the second high-class performance from Robert Emms at LFF this year, after his against-the-odds strong contribution to Bad Apples.  It’s more enjoyable to watch him in The Choral.  In contrast to Bad Apples, his role here isn’t shamefully underwritten.

    Despite Elgar’s putting the kibosh on things, the choir, according to let’s-do-the-show-right-here-in-the-barn tradition, goes ahead with the performance, but without charging for entrance.  Their reinterpretation includes, as well as singing, tableaux featuring a corps of wounded soldiers back from the Front.  The locals that pack the town hall to watch, receive the oratorio with enthralled reverence:  you don’t ask quite how this hitherto jingoistic community has turned implicitly pacifist.  The performance takes place on the eve of the departure overseas of Ellis, Lofty and Mitch, all now of age to fight.  Mitch tries in vain to persuade Mary to have sex before he goes.  Where he fails, Lofty succeeds with Mrs Bishop (Lyndsey Marshal), a local prostitute whose clients have also included sex-starved Duxbury and his peers:  unlike them, first-timer Lofty isn’t charged for Mrs Bishop’s services.  The film’s concluding scene at the Ramsden train station, as the young men go off to war and Horner is escorted away by military police, is in effect a cast curtain call.  Although written directly for the screen, The Choral, for the most part, might as well be a stage piece, and that no doubt suits Nicholas Hytner.  With much of the action naturally taking place indoors, the direction is jarring only when Hytner goes en plein air with a sequence that doesn’t belong there (like a quasi-impromptu choir rehearsal that culminates in Clyde’s seeing Bella kiss another man).  I can’t honestly say The Choral is a good film, but I can’t honestly deny that I’m very glad to have seen it.

    17 October 2025

    [1] This looks to be an invention for the film.  According to Elgar’s Wikipedia entry, his many honorary degrees didn’t include one from Nicholas Hytner’s native city, though he did receive one from Leeds, Bennett’s home turf, in 1904.

  • Orphan

    Árva

    László Nemes (2025)

    When a filmmaker gives an audience advance notice of how to look at his work, you’re bound to wonder if he’s anxious the work doesn’t speak for itself.  Introducing Orphan in NFT1 at the London Film Festival, László Nemes encouraged us to see the film not as ‘a historical reconstruction’, rather as ‘an individual’s story’.  Those two things aren’t mutually exclusive, though – as Nemes proved in his multi-award-winning debut feature, Son of Saul (2015), where the lead performance and distinctive camerawork combined to deliver a powerful character study within a highly specific, grimly detailed historical context.  Nemes told the story almost entirely from Saul’s point of view, as almost literally expressed in DP Mátyás Erdély’s visuals.  In his next film, Sunset (2018), a different kind of historical drama, Nemes used a more conventionally objective narrative, and the result was disappointing.  So is Orphan (as it happens, I saw it seven years to the day after seeing Sunset at an LFF screening).  Nemes doesn’t want, or isn’t able, to fuse what’s going on inside the young title character’s head with coherent storytelling.  Despite a core idea that’s simple and potentially strong, the writer-director and Clara Royer, who again shares the screenplay credit with him, fragment the narrative – a technique that doesn’t illuminate the protagonist and which is sometimes confusing.

    A crucial feature of Nemes’ third feature is that the title is a misnomer.  In a prologue, set in 1949, the main character, a Jewish boy called Andor, is reclaimed by his mother, Klára (Andrea Waskovics), from the orphanage in which it appears she placed her infant son, for his own protection, a few years earlier.  The main action takes place in Budapest in 1957, the year after the failed Hungarian Uprising.  Andor (Bojtorján Barabas) is now twelve years old.  Although Klára’s husband is presumed to have died in a Nazi concentration camp towards the end of World War II, Andor not only idealises the father he doesn’t remember but is reluctant to admit he’s no longer alive.  As Saul in the earlier Nemes film developed an obsessive, irrational belief that he had a son, so Andor mythicises an absent father – and regularly talks to him (as a Christian boy of Andor’s generation might have talked to his Heavenly Father).  In the 1949 prologue, the young child Andor (Tibor Martin Loppert) doesn’t want to leave his hiding place in the orphanage gardens, and that predicts his mindset throughout the story.  Andor’s refusal to accept what he’s repeatedly told to accept, intensifies with the emergence of brutish, physically abusive Berend (Grégory Gadebois).  When her husband was deported during the war, Klára survived by taking refuge in Berend’s home.  He is Andor’s biological father, now hellbent on asserting his paternity and creating a family unit with Klára and Andor, as forcefully as need be.

    Bojtorján Barabas has a heavy load for a child actor to shoulder.  It takes a while to adjust to his voice, which hasn’t quite broken and, early on, is hard to distinguish from female voices on the soundtrack – those of his mother and of Elza (Hermina Fátyol), her colleague in the grocer’s shop where Klára works.  Barabas does well, though you’re always conscious that he’s acting – which isn’t the case with some of the adults in the film.  As Berend, Grégory Gadebois is not just an intimidating presence but fearlessly repulsive.  Nemes seems to be overdoing it making Berend a butcher by profession, but Gadebois, to his credit, shows him proper sympathy – enough to make understandable, if never likeable, Berend’s stubborn insistence on bending Andor to his will.  Understandable is not the word for the film’s subplots and, as a result, characters involved in them, like Andor’s friend Sári (Elíz Szabó) and her brother Tamás (Soma Sándor), an activist in the recent uprising and who’s in hiding from the authorities.  According to Klára, her husband Hirsch used to work at the box office in the local Yiddish theatre; the Polish actor Marcin Czarnak (who also appeared in Son of Saul and Sunset) makes a strong impression in his small role as Hirsch’s friend from those days.

    Andor’s traumatic discovery, and the family secret at the heart of the film, are supposedly inspired by the experiences in post-war Budapest of Laszlo Nemes’ own father, which may partly explain the director’s claim to have told ‘an individual’s story’.  Once you’ve seen Orphan, though, Nemes’ implication that such a story is somehow separable from its historical context, is even more puzzling.  He not only describes time and place in an essentially realistic way.  He also has the characters’ situations resonate with Hungary’s relationship with the Soviet Union during and after the Second World War.  Russian forces liberated Budapest in 1945 and crushed the anti-Soviet uprising in 1956; Klára owes her life and her child’s life to Berend, who’s now ready to tyrannise her and Andor.  The grocery store where she and Elza work was once owned by the latter’s Jewish family; its new, Stalinist owner (Konrád Quintus) despises his Jewish employees.  The film’s finale takes place at a funfair.  While his mother waits below, Andor goes on the big wheel with Berend.  High above the ground, the boy pulls a gun on the father that he doubly, deeply resents.  (Andor originally found the gun by chance; having given the weapon to Tamás, he later reclaims it.)  The funfair climax is certainly suspenseful to watch, until the moment you realise Andor won’t pull the trigger.  This is no doubt meant to reflect the 1957 reality of Hungary’s uneasy, uncertain future, behind the Iron Curtain, with its Soviet oppressor.  Yet the final non-event isn’t a convincing expression of Andor’s impulsive personality:  he would have fired the gun.  Orphan‘s symbolic conclusion subjugates an individual’s character to the political history from which their story derives.

    16 October 2025

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