Lunch Hour
Lunch Hour is a 1962 film based on a one-act play by John Mortimer. It is about a man and a woman who attempt to have an affair during their lunch hour, but are continually interrupted. Shirley Anne Field described it as perhaps "the most enjoyable film I'd ever done" because the cast and crew all worked so closely together.[2]
Lunch Hour | |
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Directed by | James Hill |
Produced by | John Mortimer & Harold Orton |
Written by | John Mortimer |
Based on | play by John Mortimer |
Starring | Shirley Anne Field Robert Stephens |
Production company | Eyeline Productions |
Distributed by | Bryanston Films (UK) |
Release date | 1962 |
Running time | 64 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | £22,750[1] |
Plot
A recently graduated art school designer (Shirley Anne Field) joins a wallpaper manufacturing company and catches the eye of a married middle manager (Robert Stephens). They begin a workplace affair during their lunchtime breaks, but their attempts to find some privacy are continually thwarted.
The man eventually locates a small hotel where he books a room for just one hour, but then feels the need to invent a hugely complicated tale to tell the hotel manager (Kay Walsh) about a troubled marriage and a wife travelling down from Scarborough for a heart-to-heart talk.
The still-suspicious hotel manageress continually interrupts the couple and, as the man slowly tells the story to his would-be lover, she starts to believe the whole fantasy. She sees herself as the stay-at-home wife, ironing the man's shirts, and starts to have sympathy with the life of the real unseen betrayed wife. The couple argue over the woman's imagined life, and as their hour in the hotel is up, the affair between the couple ends and they return separately to their work roles. There, the man appears sullen and unhappy, while the woman smiles quietly to herself as she works.
Cast
- Shirley Anne Field as the Girl
- Robert Stephens as the Man
- Kay Walsh as Manageress
- Hazel Hughes as Auntie
- Michael Robbins as Harris
- Nigel Davenport as Personnel manager
- Neil Culleton as Little boy
- Sandra Leo as Little girl
- Peter Ashmore as Lecturer
- Vi Stevens as Waitress
Stage play
The cast in the original stage production included Wendy Craig with whom Mortimer had an affair and conceived a son.[3]
DVD release
The movie was issued on DVD in 2011 via the BFI Flipside release scheme.[4]
References
- Petrie, Duncan James (2017). "Bryanston Films : An Experiment in Cooperative Independent Production and Distribution" (PDF). Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television: 7. ISSN 1465-3451.
- Interview with Shirley Ann Field about the movie on BBC Radio 4 15 April 2011 accessed 19 March 2013
- Tim Walker and Richard Eden,"Mortimer's joy at son with Wendy Craig", Daily Telegraph, 12 September 2004 accessed 19 March 2013
- Cinema Retro 5 July 2011 accessed 19 March 2013
External links
- Lunch Hour on IMDb
- Lunch Hour at the British Film Institute