This event has now ended. You can watch a recording of the discussion here.
---------------------------
- Scrubbers, streaming 18 November - 2 December 2021
- Live online Q&A with Susanna Buxton, 24 November 2021
Support our partner venues by selecting your cinema of choice at checkout. Tickets £5.
The Cinema of Ideas celebrates the true heirs to Gracie Fields: the unforgettable working-class heroines who brought grit and glamour to 1980s women’s cinema. To begin, we’ll be screening Mai Zetterling’s Borstal ballad Scrubbers starring Amanda York and Chrissie Cotterill, which marked the screen debut of Kathy Burke, and has been unfairly overlooked as the distaff cousin of Alan Clarke’s prison-drama Scum. It’s a bold, unconventional and feminist film, laced with black humour, about a group of women torn between life inside and outside prison walls and confined by a system that is designed to punish rather than reform. It’s a modern melodrama and a must for fans of Orange is the New Black. To accompany the online screening, Susannah Buxton, who created the film’s costumes, will be in conversation with film historian and critic Pamela Hutchinson to discuss the making of and the impact of this astonishing film.
To stay up to date with future events on The Cinema of Ideas, sign up to our mailing list.
The Working-Class Heroines of 1980s Cinema
Britain in the 1980s was officially a matriarchy: Margaret Thatcher was in No. 10, and Queen Elizabeth expanded her family with two new, soon-to-be notorious new princesses. But in the real Britain, at a time of mass unemployment and industrial decline, women were holding the country together at home, and burning up the screen. Margi Clarke, even brighter than her red lipstick and bleached hair in Letter to Brezhnev, and Kathy Burke and the “hellhole bitches” from Mai Zetterling’s prison drama Scrubbers, were joined by Cathy Tyson’s steely-eyed working girl in Mona Lisa, Pauline Collins’ heartsick housewife in Shirley Valentine, Lynda La Plante’s Widows and the passionate Julie Walters, whether seeking a better life through books in Educating Rita or berating her husband to “fight back, you bastard”, in The Boys from the Black Stuff. These are the true heirs to Gracie Fields: the unforgettable working-class heroines of the screen. Come celebrate the grit and glamour of 1980s women’s cinema.
We would like to thank Pamela Hutchinson for programming this season of events for The Cinema of Ideas.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Video streaming notice
Please note that the video platform is not compatible with Linux based operating systems (including Chromebooks). If you need technical support please contact Eventive support. You can test your device compatibility in advance here.
- Year1982
- Runtime90 minutes
- LanguageEnglish
- CountryUnited Kingdom
- DirectorMai Zetterling
- ScreenwriterSusannah Buxton, Roy Minton, Jeremy Watt, Mai Zetterling
- ProducerDon Boyd, David Barber, Jilly Gutteridge
- Executive ProducerGeorge Harrison, Denis O'Brien
- CastAmanda York, Chrissie Cotterill, Kathy Burke
- CinematographerErnest Vincze
- EditorRodney Holland
- MusicMichael Hurd
This event has now ended. You can watch a recording of the discussion here.
---------------------------
- Scrubbers, streaming 18 November - 2 December 2021
- Live online Q&A with Susanna Buxton, 24 November 2021
Support our partner venues by selecting your cinema of choice at checkout. Tickets £5.
The Cinema of Ideas celebrates the true heirs to Gracie Fields: the unforgettable working-class heroines who brought grit and glamour to 1980s women’s cinema. To begin, we’ll be screening Mai Zetterling’s Borstal ballad Scrubbers starring Amanda York and Chrissie Cotterill, which marked the screen debut of Kathy Burke, and has been unfairly overlooked as the distaff cousin of Alan Clarke’s prison-drama Scum. It’s a bold, unconventional and feminist film, laced with black humour, about a group of women torn between life inside and outside prison walls and confined by a system that is designed to punish rather than reform. It’s a modern melodrama and a must for fans of Orange is the New Black. To accompany the online screening, Susannah Buxton, who created the film’s costumes, will be in conversation with film historian and critic Pamela Hutchinson to discuss the making of and the impact of this astonishing film.
To stay up to date with future events on The Cinema of Ideas, sign up to our mailing list.
The Working-Class Heroines of 1980s Cinema
Britain in the 1980s was officially a matriarchy: Margaret Thatcher was in No. 10, and Queen Elizabeth expanded her family with two new, soon-to-be notorious new princesses. But in the real Britain, at a time of mass unemployment and industrial decline, women were holding the country together at home, and burning up the screen. Margi Clarke, even brighter than her red lipstick and bleached hair in Letter to Brezhnev, and Kathy Burke and the “hellhole bitches” from Mai Zetterling’s prison drama Scrubbers, were joined by Cathy Tyson’s steely-eyed working girl in Mona Lisa, Pauline Collins’ heartsick housewife in Shirley Valentine, Lynda La Plante’s Widows and the passionate Julie Walters, whether seeking a better life through books in Educating Rita or berating her husband to “fight back, you bastard”, in The Boys from the Black Stuff. These are the true heirs to Gracie Fields: the unforgettable working-class heroines of the screen. Come celebrate the grit and glamour of 1980s women’s cinema.
We would like to thank Pamela Hutchinson for programming this season of events for The Cinema of Ideas.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Video streaming notice
Please note that the video platform is not compatible with Linux based operating systems (including Chromebooks). If you need technical support please contact Eventive support. You can test your device compatibility in advance here.
- Year1982
- Runtime90 minutes
- LanguageEnglish
- CountryUnited Kingdom
- DirectorMai Zetterling
- ScreenwriterSusannah Buxton, Roy Minton, Jeremy Watt, Mai Zetterling
- ProducerDon Boyd, David Barber, Jilly Gutteridge
- Executive ProducerGeorge Harrison, Denis O'Brien
- CastAmanda York, Chrissie Cotterill, Kathy Burke
- CinematographerErnest Vincze
- EditorRodney Holland
- MusicMichael Hurd