Brief Encounter Year: 1946
Film Studio: Cineguild Productions, G.C.F., Eagle-Lion Distributors
Genre: Romance, Classic, Drama
Length: 86 Min.
DirectorDavid Lean (1908)
WritingNoel Coward (1899)...Story By
David Lean (1908)...Screenwriter
Ronald Neame (1911)...Screenwriter
Anthony Havelock-Allan (1904)...Screenwriter
ProducerNoel Coward (1899)
CinematographerRobert Krasker (1913)
MusicSergei Rachmaninoff (1873)...Composer
StarsCelia Johnson (1908) as Laura Jesson
Trevor Howard (1913) as Dr. Alec Harvey
Stanley Holloway (1890) as Albert Godby
Joyce Carey (1898) as Myrtle Bagot
Cyril Raymond (1897) as Fred Jesson
Everley Gregg (1903) as Dolly Messiter
Marjorie Mars (1903) as Mary Norton
Margaret Barton (1926) as Beryl Walters, Tea Room Assistant
Review There are two English actors for whom I will go out of my way to see their performances in any film they’ve made. The first is Robert Donat and the second is Celia Johnson. Each was a respected thespian in their time, but what they shared in common was their rather tenuous association with moving pictures. For Donat, it was a matter of his health that kept him from accepting many roles, while Johnson plied her trade most famously on the stage, and only rarely would she dabble in film projects. It’s truly sad, because she has been somewhat forgotten over time and her legacy is relatively unknown to film fans.
One of her incomparable performances was that of the homemaker whose life is altered when a momentary inconvenience introduces her to a man with whom she will have a fleeting dalliance. The film was
Brief Encounter and was made by director David Lean at the end of the Second World War. For its time, the screenplay could be considered rather scandalous and I’ve often wondered how Lean got it past the British censors. When one thinks of British films and the rigid structure of English society at the time, it’s really quite amazing that the film was not only made, but was such a hit. The thought of a film chronicling an adulterous affair must have surely been the primary conversational piece at many a tea time in post war Britain, I must say.
Laura Jesson (Johnson) is your atypical English housewife, loyal, dutiful and completely submerged, in what she herself would deem, her happy day-to-day existence. She has a loving, successful husband and two obedient children, dinner or bridge with friends and her one day away from her domicile shopping in the big city. Her routines never waver, yet Laura is happy. She has a good life and a roof over her head, extremely fortunate considering the plights of others in her homeland. But fate and bit of coal dust will forever change her outlook on what she’ll come to believe is her mundane lifestyle.
On her weekly shopping trip to the city, she is awaiting the arrival of the train which shall transport her back to her safe haven, when suddenly, an express train flies by and in its turbulent wake, lodges a bit of coal dust in Laura’s eye. She enters the refreshment station on the platform, yet is unsuccessful at removing the irritant. Luckily for her, or maybe unlucky as we will find out, a doctor is inside the station awaiting his train home. He removes the bit of grit, Laura thanks him, and he leaves to catch his train. This brief
‘encounter’ will profoundly change both their lives as they will happen to meet each other again in the following two weeks. Their second meeting will be fleeting and made only in passing on the city street. But it is their third meeting that will forever bond them together.
After placing her order at a crowded restaurant, she notices the doctor arriving and surmising that he will not have a place to sit, agrees to his request to join her at her table. Their conversation is friendly and innocuous, and through it, we find out that his name is Alec (Trevor Howard), a country physician who weekly ventures to the city to cover for another physician at the hospital. During their conversation, Laura tells Alec about her weekly trips to the city for shopping and to catch a film at the local theater. In a rather bold move, Alec asks her if she wouldn’t mind if he tagged along with her to the theater. At first Laura is somewhat taken aback by his brashness, but seeing no harm in it, she acquiesces. After the movie ends, they are hurrying back to the train station, where Alec again solicits an awkward query. Will Laura meet him again, same time the following week? At first she refuses, but suddenly she remembers the good time she had during their day together, and she relents. This momentary lapse in judgment will shake her inner being to the core, as over the next few weeks, she falls in love with Alec.
I’ll go no further with the plot line as one has to view
Brief Encounter on their own to understand its subliminal seduction. David Lean has made, what I consider, one of the most sensual films in cinematic history. If this film where to be made today, we would get all the lurid details of their affair, affixed with copious amounts of their sexual trysts. But being a product of its time, Lean has to instill in the film, the same desires that both of the lead characters are feeling, yet in the viewer’s mind. He accomplishes this by using a rather unique form of plot development. He starts the film with the final moments of Laura and Alec’s relationship, as they sit, once again in the refreshment station. They are anonymous to both the viewer and the other patrons of the refreshment station. Suddenly, a woman enters, recognizes Laura and plants herself at their table. A look of bewilderment appears on both Laura and Alec’s faces as a train whistle blows, and Alec must leave to catch his train. He grabs his coat, briefly places his hand on Laura’s shoulder and departs the station. A few fleeting moments pass by, and the endlessly chattering friend gets up to buy some chocolate at the counter. When she turns back towards the table, Laura is not there. Another moment passes and Laura re-enters the station, looking disheveled and faint. Her friend buys her a brandy to help her regain her composure. In time, we will understand through Laura’s own words, as she will narrate what had occurred in the previous weeks upon her chance meeting with Alec. Why the touch on the shoulder had sent her scurrying on to the platform, and why she would become so distraught that she needed the brandy. It is through her narration of the subsequent events that we are able to delve into Laura’s quandary with not only a bit of curiosity, but with the added desire to see the two of them together. This is truly a film that tears at the heartstrings of the viewer, yet subliminally sets in the viewer’s mind, the same kind of desire felt by the couple on screen. If you love a good romance story, there is none better than
Brief Encounter.
Review Criterion- The pinnacle of film perfection and excellence.
- Not quite an immortal film, yet a masterpiece in its own right.
- Historically important film, considered a classic.
- An entertaining film that’s fun or engaging to watch.
– A good film that’s worth a Netflix venture.
- Borderline viewable.
– A bad film that may have a moment of interest.
– Insipid, trite and sophomoric, and that's its good points.
– A film so vacuous, it will suck 2 hours from the remainder of your life.
- A gangrenous and festering pustule in the chronicles of celluloid.