Prick Up Your Ears | |
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![]() UK release poster | |
Directed by | Stephen Frears |
Screenplay by | Alan Bennett |
Based on | Prick Up Your Ears byJohn Lahr |
Produced by | Andrew Brown |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Oliver Stapleton |
Music by | Stanley Myers |
Production companies | Civilhand Zenith Entertainment |
Distributed by | Curzon Film Distributors |
Release date |
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Running time | 111 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £1.9 million[1] |
Box office | $1.6 million[2] |
Prick Up Your Ears is a 1987 British film, directed byStephen Frears, about the playwrightJoe Orton and his loverKenneth Halliwell. The screenplay was written byAlan Bennett, based on the 1978 biography byJohn Lahr. The film starsGary Oldman as Orton,Alfred Molina as Halliwell,Wallace Shawn as Lahr, andVanessa Redgrave asPeggy Ramsay.
Islington, 9 August 1967. Literary agentPeggy Ramsay knocks on the door of playwright Joe Orton and his lover Kenneth Halliwell, but nobody opens. She calls the police. They find the corpses of the two men. A decade later theatre critic John Lahr visits Peggy Ramsay because he wants to write Orton's biography. They find Orton's diaries, and Peggy tells Lahr about Orton's life.
Orton and Halliwell's relationship began at theRoyal Academy of Dramatic Arts. Orton started out as the uneducated youth to Halliwell's older faux-sophisticate. As the relationship progressed, however, Orton grew increasingly confident in his talent while Halliwell's writing stagnated. They fell into a parody of a traditional married couple, with Orton as the "husband" and Halliwell as the long-suffering and increasingly-ignored "wife" (a situation exacerbated at a time when being a sexually active homosexual was illegal). Orton was commissioned to write a screenplay forthe Beatles. Halliwell got carried away in preparing for a meeting with the "Fab Four", but Orton was taken away for a meeting on his own. Finally, in August 1967, a despondent Halliwell kills Orton and commitssuicide.
Ian McKellen was originally envisioned as Halliwell.[3] McKellen explained: "I needed a holiday – I'd been working so hard – so I just kept saying 'no, no, no', but when I saw the film I really regretted not having done it."[4]Maggie Smith turned down the role of Ramsay, saying that she did not want to perturb her sons by starring in a film that featured homosexual promiscuity and murder.[5]Keith Allen was in talks to play Orton before Oldman was cast.[3]
Prick Up Your Ears has a 92% rating at review aggregatorRotten Tomatoes, based on 39 reviews, with an average score of 7.7/10.[6]
Roger Ebert awardedPrick Up Your Ears four stars out of four, describing Redgrave's performance as "superb", and praising the work of Oldman and Molina: "The great performances in the movie are, of course, at its center. Gary Oldman plays Orton, and Alfred Molina plays Halliwell, and these are two of the best performances of the year... [Oldman] is the best young British actor around".[7]Variety noted: "The script is witty, the direction fluid, with one of the homosexual orgy scenes in a public toilet almost balletic, and the depiction of the lovers' life in their flat suitably claustrophobic."[8]
Vincent Canby was less enthused, writing: "The film covers the main events of the Orton life in a manner that is nothing less than distracted. One has little understanding of the fatal intensity – and need – that kept Orton and Halliwell together." He nevertheless had praise for the film's acting.[9] Similarly,Pauline Kael lauded Redgrave but said the male relationship was unconvincing and suffused with "modern-style psychosexual moralizing", and that "unlike Orton, it [the script] takes no real delight in misbehaving."[10]
Oldman earned aBAFTA Award nomination for Best Actor;[11] Redgrave received BAFTA[11] andGolden Globe Award[12] nominations for Best Actress in a Supporting Role. Redgrave won Best Supporting Actress at theNew York Film Critics Circle Awards.[13]Alan Bennett earned a BAFTA Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay.[11] The film was also nominated for Best Foreign Film at the1987 Independent Spirit Awards[14] and won the award for Best Artistic Contribution at that year'sCannes Film Festival.[15]
[Smith's] reaction to Alan Bennett's screenplay, which dealt in homosexual promiscuity and murder, was to retreat behind the excuse of not wanting to embarrass or upset her sons.