The Go-Between | |
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Genre | |
Based on |
The Go-Between by L. P. Hartley |
Directed by | Pete Travis |
Starring | |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Producer(s) | |
Running time | 90 minutes |
Production company(s) | |
Distributor | BBC |
Release | |
Original network | BBC One |
Original release | 20 September 2015 |
The Go-Between is a 2015 British romantic drama film based on the 1953 novel The Go-Between by L. P. Hartley. It was filmed at Englefield House in Berkshire.
Leo, an elderly man, is travelling back to the place where he spent the summer of 1900 as the guest of a much wealthier school friend, Marcus Maudsley. On his journey he recalls the events surrounding his original visit, during which he had celebrated his thirteenth birthday and also become besotted with his friend’s older sister Marian, whose family strongly hoped that she would marry the local landowner, Viscount Trimingham.
During Leo’s stay, Marcus had become unwell and, with nothing else to do, Leo had been persuaded to carry secret messages between Marian and a local tenant farmer, Ted Burgess. Initially unaware of the implication of their messages, Leo started to realise their significance shortly before becoming caught up in a sequence of events that he could not control, and barely comprehended at the time. As an older man, everything that happened that summer – the memories of which he has suppressed ever since – become clearer. At the end of his journey, the older Leo sees both Marian and her estranged grandson; Marian persuades him to act as a go-between one last time.
Reviewing The Go-Between for UK daily newspaper The Daily Telegraph, Jasper Rees gave the adaptation five stars out of five, writing: "Where the BBC’s fresh take on Lady Chatterley’s Lover hollowed out the original and injected its own up-to-date agitprop, The Go-Between (BBC One) kept faith with LP Hartley’s devastating story of love denied. This was what creative fidelity is meant to look like". He added that, "Pete Travis’s roving camerawork revealed the gilded paradise of Brandon Hall [sic - Brandham Hall] in impressionistic glances and lush screen grabs of floating pollen and wafting corn. As for the protagonists, he shot Joanna Vanderham’s Marian as a radiant extension of the sun, while Ben Batt’s Ted suggested a gritty compound of gnarled oak and loamy earth". Rees singled out Jack Hollington for especial praise, "as smitten young Leo, whose trusting eyes caught brief confused glimpses of his coming expulsion from Eden. This was a superbly intuitive performance from a child actor bearing a heavy burden. Hollington held his ground throughout, with Vanderham’s manipulative Marian and Batt’s taciturn Ted (both excellent), and even when Lesley Manville as Marian’s tightly wound mother tried to worm the shattering truth out of him. In the key scenes he sang like Ernest Lough and took his cricket catch like Ben Stokes". He concluded that, "Intensified by Christian Henson’s swooning soundtrack, this was a deeply moving reverie about a life sacrificed not in the mud of Flanders but on the sun-baked lawns of Norfolk".