''This Sporting Life'' is a 1963 British
kitchen sink
Kitchen sink may refer to:
* ''Freaks of Nature'' (film), a 2015 comedy horror film, also known as ''Kitchen Sink''
* ''Kitchen Sink'', a 1989 horror short directed by Alison Maclean
* ''Kitchen Sink'' (TV series), cookery series on Food Network ...
drama film directed by
Lindsay Anderson. Based on the
1960 novel of the same name by
David Storey, which won the 1960 Macmillan Fiction Award, it recounts the story of a
rugby league footballer in
Wakefield, a mining city in
Yorkshire, whose romantic life is not as successful as his sporting life. Storey, a former professional rugby league footballer, also wrote the screenplay.
The film stars
Richard Harris,
Rachel Roberts,
William Hartnell, and
Alan Badel. It was Harris's first starring role, and won him the
Best Actor Award
Best Actor is the name of an award which is presented by various film, television and theatre organizations, festivals, and people's awards to leading actors in a film, television series, television film or play.
The term most often refers to the ...
at the
1963 Cannes Film Festival
The 16th Cannes Film Festival was held from 9 to 23 May 1963. The Palme d'Or went to the ''Il Gattopardo'' by Luchino Visconti. The festival opened with '' The Birds'', directed by Alfred Hitchcock.
Jury
The following people were appointed as the ...
.
He was also nominated for the
Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role, and the
BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role. For her work in the film, Roberts won her second
BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Best Actress in a Leading Role is a British Academy Film Award presented annually by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) to recognize an actress who has delivered an outstanding leading performance in a film.
* From 1952 to ...
, and was nominated for the
Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role. The film opened at the
Odeon Leicester Square in London's West End on 7 February 1963.
Plot
Set in the fictional city of City, the film is about Frank Machin, a bitter young
coal miner from the
West Riding of Yorkshire. The first part of the story is told through a series of flashbacks when Frank is anaesthetised in a dentist's chair, having had his front teeth broken in a rugby league match, and recovering at a Christmas party. The second part takes place after he has fully regained his senses, and proceeds without flashbacks.
Following a nightclub altercation, in which Frank takes on the captain of the local rugby league club and punches a couple of other players, he asks a scout for the team to help him get a tryout. Although at first somewhat uncoordinated at the sport, he impresses Gerald Weaver, one of the team's owners, with the spirit and brutality of his playing style during the trial game. He receives a large signing bonus to join the top team as a
loose forward (number 13) and impresses all with his aggressive forward play. He often punches or elbows the opposing players—and sometimes even those of his own team.
Off the field, Frank is much less successful. His recently-widowed landlady, Mrs Margaret Hammond, a mother of two young children, rebuffs Frank's attempts to court her and treats him rudely and abrasively. She lost her husband in an accident at Weaver's engraving firm, but received little financial compensation, because the death was suspected to be a
suicide
Suicide is the act of intentionally causing one's own death. Mental disorders (including depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, personality disorders, anxiety disorders), physical disorders (such as chronic fatigue syndrome), and s ...
. One day, Frank takes Margaret and her children to play in the River Wharfe next to
Bolton Priory. Another time, Margaret gets annoyed when Frank comes home drunk. He desires her sexually and, eventually, grabs her and forces her onto his bed. Her daughter interrupts them, but then she acquiesces and they have sexual relations.
At Weaver's Christmas party, Frank quarrels with Weaver and his predatory wife, whose advances Frank had rejected, much to her chagrin, and it is clear that he has lost Weaver's favour, though Slomer, the team's other owner, still supports him. When he gets home after the party, Margaret agrees to share his bed to keep him warm, as he looks unwell with his swollen face and missing teeth, but, in her grief, she cannot really return his affection, saying she is scared to invest her feelings in one person, as they might go away or die. She sometimes insults him, referring to him as "just a great ape", and, on their first proper date, Frank insults the staff and flaunts protocol at the fancy restaurant to which he takes her. Margaret is embarrassed and leaves, and the scene is witnessed by the Weavers.
Maurice, Frank's friend and teammate, gets married, and Frank and Margaret attend the ceremony. When Frank goes over to congratulate the couple, Margaret walks away. She says she feels ashamed, like a kept woman, especially since Frank bought her a fur coat. He strikes her, and then says he thought she was finally becoming happy. On another occasion, she says that their neighbours think she is a slut and she and the children are not "proper people" because of Frank. They have a row, and Frank goes out drinking with Maurice. He says he wants another job, "something permanent", and believes Margaret needs him, though she does not realise it.
Frank tries to talk to Margaret, but she defends her privacy, saying he knows nothing about Eric, her husband. He says she drove Eric to suicide, and Margaret, outraged, demands that Frank leave and starts throwing his belongings out of his room. Frank says he loves her, but she is furious with him. Eventually, he goes to stay at a cheap boarding house in a bombed-out area, leaving his Bentley incongruously parked outside.
Intending a reconciliation with Margaret, Frank returns to her house, but a neighbour says she is in hospital. The doctor tells him that Margaret is unconscious, having suffered a
brain haemorrhage, and that she may not have the strength, or perhaps the will, to survive. Frank sits with her, holding her hand and talking gently. Distracted by a large spider on the wall, when he looks back at Margaret, blood seeps from her mouth, and she dies. In his rage, Frank punches the spider. He does not speak to the children or their minder when he leaves the hospital. Returning to Margaret's house and breaking in by the back door, Frank wanders through the empty space and calls out her name before collapsing in tears.
In the closing scene, Frank is seen on the rugby field, now exhausted and vulnerable to the ravages of time and injury.
Cast
Production
''This Sporting Life'' was Anderson's first feature film as director, though he had made numerous short documentaries in the previous fifteen years, and even
won an Oscar for 1954's ''
Thursday's Children
''Thursday's Children'' is a 1954 British short documentary film directed by Guy Brenton and Lindsay Anderson about The Royal School for the Deaf in Margate, Kent, UK, a residential school then teaching lip reading rather than sign language. A ...
''. The film had first been discussed by
The Rank Organisation as a possible project for
Joseph Losey
Joseph Walton Losey III (; January 14, 1909 – June 22, 1984) was an American theatre and film director, producer, and screenwriter. Born in Wisconsin, he studied in Germany with Bertolt Brecht and then returned to the United States. Blackliste ...
, and then
Karel Reisz, who, reluctant to direct another film with a similar setting and theme to ''
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning'' (1960), suggested that Anderson direct it, with himself serving as producer.
Among the film's supporting cast is
William Hartnell, who shortly afterwards began his role as
the first Doctor Who; it was his role in ''This Sporting Life'' that brought Hartnell to the attention of ''
Doctor Who
''Doctor Who'' is a British science fiction television series broadcast by the BBC since 1963. The series depicts the adventures of a Time Lord called the Doctor, an extraterrestrial being who appears to be human. The Doctor explores the u ...
''-producer
Verity Lambert. The film also features
Arthur Lowe
Arthur Lowe (22 September 1915 – 15 April 1982) was an English actor. His acting career spanned 36 years, including starring roles in numerous theatre and television productions. He played Captain Mainwaring in the British sitcom ''Dad' ...
, who would go on to star in ''
Dad's Army'' and appear in four later films directed by Anderson. In addition,
Edward Fox,
Anton Rodgers, and
Bryan Mosley appear as uncredited extras.
Filming locations
Many of the scenes in ''This Sporting Life'' were filmed at
Belle Vue, the home stadium of
Wakefield Trinity, and
Thrum Hall, the home stadium of
Halifax. The scene where Frank (
Richard Harris) leaps from a bus to buy a newspaper, and then leaps back onto the bus, was filmed at the top of
Westgate Westgate or West Gate may refer to:
Companies
* Westgate Resorts, a real estate company and timeshare company
* Westgate Department Stores, the department store division of Anglia Regional Co-operative Society in the United Kingdom
Events
* Westg ...
,
Wakefield. The location is still instantly recognisable, and has changed little in the decades since. The houses used for filming the outdoor scenes in ''This Sporting Life'' were in Servia Terrace in
Leeds. The riverside location where Frank takes Margaret and her family for an outing in his new car is
Bolton Priory in the
Yorkshire Dales.
Editing
Anthony Sloman wrote about the film's editing:
Another description of the editing says:
Direction
Anderson wrote in his diary on 23 April 1962, after the first month or so of production: "the most striking feature of it all, I suppose, has been the splendour and misery of my work and relationship with Richard". He felt that Harris was acting better than ever before in his career, but feared his feelings for Harris, whose combination of physicality, affection and cruelty fascinated him, meant that he lacked the detachment he needed as a director, continuing: "I ought to be calm and detached with him. Instead I am impulsive, affectionate, infinitely susceptible."
Release
Critical reception and box office
Critical response to the film was favourable. In the United States, the
Reuters news agency described it as being praised unanimously by the critics for New York City publications. ''
Variety'' praised the film's "gutsy vitality", as well as the production of Reisz and the directorial efforts of Anderson, who "brings the keen, observant eye of a documentary man to many vivid episodes without sacrificing the story line".
On its initial release, the film was a commercial flop with British audiences and did not recoup its cost.
John Davis, the Chairman of
The Rank Organisation, announced that the company would not venture further with
"kitchen sink" film projects, nor would his company make such a "squalid" film again, and ''This Sporting Life'' has been seen more generally as ending producers' willingness to back such
British New Wave films.
However, after 13 years, the film had earned a distributor’s gross of £92,612 in the UK and £128,599 from overseas.
[Chapman, J. (2022). The Money Behind the Screen: A History of British Film Finance, 1945-1985. Edinburgh University Press p 191.]
Writing in 1980,
John Russell Taylor thought it a mistake to link ''This Sporting Life'' with the "kitchen sink" films released in the preceding few years, because its "emotionalism" made it "unique", setting it apart from the earlier works:
Awards and nominations
Home media
On 22 January 2008, the film was released as a Region 1 DVD by
The Criterion Collection.
See also
*
BFI Top 100 British films
References
External links
*
*
*
*
*
''This Sporting Life: The Lonely Heart''an essay by Neil Sinyard at the
Criterion Collection
The Criterion Collection, Inc. (or simply Criterion) is an American home-video distribution company that focuses on licensing, restoring and distributing "important classic and contemporary films." Criterion serves film and media scholars, cinep ...
{{Lindsay Anderson
1963 films
1960s sports drama films
British black-and-white films
British sports drama films
Films based on British novels
Films shot in Wakefield
Films shot in West Yorkshire
Films set in Wakefield
Films set in Yorkshire
Films directed by Lindsay Anderson
Rugby league films
Films about social realism
Wakefield
1963 directorial debut films
1963 drama films
Compositions by Robert Gerhard
1960s English-language films
1960s British films
English-language sports drama films