Distant Voices, Still Lives
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| Plot Synopsis |
by Hal Erickson |
Set in 1940s England, Distant Voices/Still Lives is a compassionate look at a radically dysfunctional family. The son and his mother must endure the casual and overt cruelties of the bull-necked father. The ongoing abuse takes its toll in the form of failed marriages and misguided attempts at seeking security outside the family unit. As was the case with his earlier short subject trilogy (The Children, Madonna and Child, Death and Transfiguration), director Terence Davies based much of the material on his own life, combining rheumy-eyed cynicism with soft-edged nostalgia (the musical track, drawn from popular wartime songs, is particularly evocative). |
| Similar Works |
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The Long Day Closes
(1992, Terence Davies)
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The Neon Bible
(1995, Terence Davies)
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The Singing Detective
(1986, Jon Amiel)
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Nil by Mouth
(1997, Gary Oldman)
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The War Zone
(1999, Tim Roth)
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Ratcatcher
(1998, Lynne Ramsay)
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Rain
(2001, Christine Jeffs)
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Obeti A Vrazi
(2001, Andrea Sedlackova)
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All or Nothing
(2002, Mike Leigh)
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Spider
(2002, David Cronenberg)
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