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Days of Hope

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1975 British TV drama series
This article uses a non-standardepisode table. Please convert it to use{{Episode table}}.
Days of Hope
Written byJim Allen
Directed byKen Loach
StarringPaul Copley
Pamela Brighton
Nikolas Simmonds
Theme music composerMarc Wilkinson
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes4
Production
ProducerTony Garnett
CinematographyTony Pierce-Roberts
John Else
EditorRoger Waugh
Running time410 minutes
Original release
NetworkBBC One
Release11 September (1975-09-11) –
2 October 1975 (1975-10-02)

Days of Hope is aBBC television drama serial produced in 1975. The series dealt with the lives of aworking-class family from the turmoils of theFirst World War in 1916 to theGeneral Strike in 1926. It was written byJim Allen, produced byTony Garnett and directed byKen Loach.

The story opens in 1916 with Ben Matthews joining theBritish Army for service in World War I. He is transferred toIreland in order to face local rebels during theIrish revolutionary period (1912-1923). In 1921, Ben's army unit is relocated toCounty Durham and ordered to face striking miners. Ben decides todesert his army duties, allying himself with the miners during arevolt. Offered hospitality by one of the miners, Ben starts a romantic relationship with his host's eldest daughter. In 1924, Ben is an ex-convict and he joins the ranks of theCommunist Party of Great Britain. The action then shifts to the General Strike in 1926, with union leaders betraying the miners and acting against them.

The series was controversial for depicting the British Army usingconscientious objectors as bound targets for enemy fire during World War One, but an army veteran published war-era illustrations of this practice in newspapers to establish that this was a real-life event and not fiction. The series was also controversial for its negative portrayal of the former prime ministerWinston Churchill, highlighting his actions against the coal miners during the strikes of 1921 and 1926 while comparing him to avulture. In contrast, the series offered a positive portrayal of the Russian leaderVladimir Lenin and compared him to aneagle.

Cast

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  • Paul Copley as Ben Matthews
  • Pamela Brighton as Sarah Hargreaves
  • Nikolas Simmonds as Philip Hargreaves
  • Alun Armstrong as Billy Shepherd
  • Clifford Kershaw as Tom Matthews
  • Helene Palmer as Martha Matthews
  • Gary Roberts as Joel Barnett
  • Jean Spence as May Barnett
  • Christine Anderson as Jenny Barnett
  • John Phillips as Josiah Wedgwood
  • Stephen Rea as Reporter

Development

[edit]

The original plan was to make afeature film centred on the 1921 part of the series. Following problems with finance for a cinematic release, the project was moved to the BBC, and the decision was then made to expand from one film to four parts with characters' views changing over time.[1]

Episodes

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#TitleOriginal airdateRunning time
1"1916: Joining Up"11 September 1975 (1975-09-11)95 minutes
Ben Matthews enlists in the army and ends up serving in Ireland, where there is resistance to British rule. His sister's husband Philip Hargreaves is sentenced to death as aconscientious objector but is given a last-minute reprieve.
2"1921"18 September 1975 (1975-09-18)100 minutes
During the coal lock-out in 1921, Ben's army unit is redeployed from Ireland to police the dispute inCounty Durham. Ben deserts the army and is sheltered by a miner named Joel. He begins a relationship with Joel's eldest daughter. When donations of food from Liverpool are intercepted by the police and the army, the miners revolt and threaten to blow up the colliery with dynamite, taking some soldiers hostage in the process. Joel and his comrades then make demands on the pit owner, Mr. Pitchard.
3"1924"25 September 1975 (1975-09-25)80 minutes
Ben is released from prison and joins the Communist Party. Philip Hargreaves is elected as a Labour MP.
4"1926: General Strike"2 October 1975 (1975-10-02)135 minutes
The miners are betrayed by union leaders such asJ.H. Thomas during theGeneral Strike.

Box-set and certification

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Days of Hope is included on theKen Loach at the BBC DVD box-set released in 2011.

The first two episodes of the series were given 15 certificates: the first episode for strong language,[2] and the second for strong language and moderate violence.[3] Episodes 3 and 4 were given PG certificates.[4][5]

Reception

[edit]

The first episode ofDays of Hope caused considerable controversy in the British media owing to its critical depiction of the military inWorld War I,[6] and particularly over a scene where conscientious objectors were tied up to stakes outside trenches in view of enemy fire after refusing to obey orders.[7][8] An ex-serviceman subsequently contactedThe Times newspaper with an illustration from the time of a similar scene.[8] In an interview, Loach said that numerous letters were written to newspapers about small inaccuracies (e.g. the soldiers' marching formations) but relatively few challenging the main narrative of events.[9]

In contrast, the Marxist historianJohn Newsinger has argued that the final episode ofDays of Hope was so concerned with historical accuracy about the General Strike that it had become "boring" and "a heroic failure". He contrasts this with "the magnificent socialist dramas" in the first episodes, which were less concerned with historical accuracy.[10]

Winston Churchill is portrayed relatively negatively in the series, which highlights his attitude towards the coal miners during the strikes of 1921 and 1926. Ken Loach said in an interview that the media were particularly offended by a line that compared Churchill to a vulture andLenin to an eagle.[9]

In an editorial entitledDoes the bias run both ways?,The Times defended the decision of the BBC to broadcast the plays against calls for censorship but also questioned whether the BBC would have broadcast a play "with equal dramatic merit, but with a right-wing bias".[11]

A lengthy review inFreedom anarchist fortnightly praised the "painstaking" research, the evolution in character of Sarah Hargreaves and the space given for different points of view in the second episode, but criticised the lengthy dialogue, the forced references to Trotsky and the overuse of slow fade-to-black sequences.[12]

References

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  1. ^"Days of Hope".Sight and Sound: 160. Summer 1975.
  2. ^BBFC: Days of Hope, Episode 1
  3. ^BBFC: Days of Hope, Episode 2
  4. ^BBFC: Days of Hope, Episode 3
  5. ^BBFC: Days of Hope, Episode 4
  6. ^BFI Screen Online – Days of Hope (1975)
  7. ^Ken Loach – the controversies
  8. ^abDays of Hope, Tony Williams, Cinémathèque Annotations on Film, Issue 31, April 2004
  9. ^abInterview on Disc 6 of the box-setKen Loach at the BBC
  10. ^Newsinger, John (Summer 1999)."Scenes from the class war: Ken Loach and socialist cinema".International Socialism.2:83. Retrieved28 August 2017.
  11. ^"Does the bias run both ways?".The Times. London. 30 September 1975. p. 13.
  12. ^"Days of Betrayal".Freedom anarchist fortnightly.36 (42–43). London: Freedom Press. 25 October 1975.

Further reading

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  • Morris, Margaret. "The General Strike: A Television Documentary,"History 60#199, (1975), pp. 224–27.online

External links

[edit]
Works directed byKen Loach
Feature films
Documentaries
Television
Associated
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