The film, which weaves in Davies’s obsession with mortality, is so personal to the director that it has little to do with other people’s experiences.
Of Time and the City (2009)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:52
Fresh:48
Rotten:4
Average Rating:7.7/10
Consensus: Terrence Davies' heartfelt, sometimes funny new feature documentary is part scrapbook, part confessional.
Theatrical Release:31-10-2008
Synopsis: Acclaimed British filmmaker Terence Davies revisits the city of his youth in the elegiac documentary OF TIME AND THE CITY. A deeply personal evocation of post-World War II Liverpool, the film is a... Acclaimed British filmmaker Terence Davies revisits the city of his youth in the elegiac documentary OF TIME AND THE CITY. A deeply personal evocation of post-World War II Liverpool, the film is a patchwork visual poem woven from archival footage, a mash-up of classical and pop music standards, and Davies’s own incantations--delivered in his lugubrious, at times overwrought, elocution. Revealing a caustic wit and a biting contempt for institutions such as the Catholic Church and British royalty, the director underscores his hatred of such symbols by depicting images of the environs of Liverpool’s working class, an environment that Davies sneers at as demonstrating "the British genius for the dismal." From the decay of government-built council houses to the crumbling edifices of shipyards, Davies chooses to stare down an urban landscape that echoes his own troubled past. Davies speaks candidly of his own childhood experiences, from the specter of Catholic guilt and the "dark desires" of homosexuality awakened at professional wrestling matches, to the rapture of seeing Hollywood films and musicals--pain and pleasure the filmmaker has sought to come to terms with his whole adult life. Connecting a deeply personal biographical lens to the universal notion of time, place, and home, OF TIME AND THE CITY depicts the psychic dissonance of arriving 35 years later in a city where the ravages of urban blight and rapid gentrification have rendered it completely and utterly transformed. [More]
Director: Terence Davies
Director: Terence Davies
Screenwriter: Terence Davies
Producer: Sol Papadopoulos, Roy Boulter
Studio: Strand Releasing
Reviews for Of Time and the City
Illuminating, heartfelt and often very, very funny, here’s hoping we don’t have to wait so long for his next movie.
Ironically, Davies' own, sadly minor, talent is for being uniquely dismal, which means that this film is unlikely to appeal to many non critics, inside or outside Liverpool. Ken Dodd might have done this a whole lot better.
But it's a sham, a risible and almost militantly superficial piece of regional PR that exposes the snobbish and flimsy foundations on which Davies's bewilderingly inflated reputation rests.
What a lovely film this is, and what a welcome comeback for one of Britain's greatest film-makers.
Droll, angry, erudite, moving, this is the most poignant, beautiful, entrancing British film of the year.
And, by being so personal in a way that’s so honest and so incisive, Davies indirectly offers national commentary that’s relevant far, far beyond his old Merseyside doorstep
A masterpiece. Davies demonstrates how art achieves the universal from the particular.
Part-scrapbook, part- confessional, Davies’s odyssey through his past is garlanded with irreverent aphorisms. This is a film to be cherished.
Take away the Fab Four and the monstrous Metropolitan Cathedral and this could be a post-war chronicle of any northern conurbation; an hour-plus Hovis ad with more broken windows.
And all for £250,000. Now will someone please fund the man to direct another feature?
It all works. It all stirs, provokes and bewitches. This is a film of love, passion and indignation, full of startling beauties.
It is the kind of documentary which deserves to stand among the very best of its time — precisely because it is so tied to its author’s own experience, both visually and emotionally.
Engaging, heartfelt and impeccably directed, this is an achingly personal documentary that packs a powerful emotional punch.
Davies accessibly structures what is almost entirely archival footage and narrates the scenes himself using his own memories and observations, infused with a dose of sarcasm and camp.
A lyrical poem about his hometown, this is Davies' first movie in eight years. And his artistic approach gives us a moving, kaleidoscopic portrait both of a city and of the filmmaker himself.
The film invites a reverie. It inspired thoughts of the transience of life.
Latest News for Of Time and the City
May 03, 2009:
Like a long, bickering marriage or a favorite pair of well worn out shoes, UK combo filmmaker and nostalgia buff Davies can't seem to resolve his unsettling but addictive love/hate thing with the city that informed his imagination for better or worse. ![]()
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February 08, 2009:
Trailer & Poster review ![]()
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January 23, 2009:
Cinworld: Like a long marriage or a favorite pair of well worn out shoes, UK combo filmmaker and nostalgia buff Davies can't seem to resolve his unsettling but addictive love/hate thing with the city that informed his imagination for better or worse. ![]()
More...
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