Capital Celluloid 2025 — Day 360: Sun Dec 28

The Deep Blue Sea (Litvak, 1955): Close-Up Cinema, 8pm

This 16mm presentation in the Never on Sunday season at Close-Up Cinema is introduced by strand curator Ehsan Khoshbakht

Close-Up Cinema introduction:
Hester (Vivien Leigh), a middle-aged woman's suicide attempt at the beginning of the story sparks off two flashbacks, one from the point of view of the upper-class husband she has abandoned and the other from the view of the younger, capricious ex-RAF pilot for whom she has left her husband. Back to the present, the film revolves around her desperate attempt to win back her lover, only to realise she is yearning for something she can’t have. Adapted from a play of the same name by Terence Rattigan who also wrote the script under director Anatole Litvak’s supervision, Litvak conveys a stifling world of failed dreams (a doctor who has turned bookie, a jobless and meddlesome actress) with an emotional impact somehow stronger than Terence Davies’s 2011 version. Litvak shows unconstrained impulses without making them look pathetic. There's no malice of intent in the way characters hurt each other, but things always fall in the wrong places. When hope wanes, the dust of memories obscures it beyond recognition. There’s a profound sadness to the sense of love ebbing away, scene after scene.
Ehsan Khoshbakht

Here (and above) is the trailer.

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