Actors: Dora Bryan, Robert Stephens, Rita Tushingham, Murray Melvin, Paul Danquah, Michael Bilton
Director: Tony Richardson
Language: ENGLISH: LPCM Mono (48kHz, 24-bit)
Subtitles: English
Region: Region A
Aspect
Ratio: 1.66:1
Number
of Discs: 1
Rating: Not
Rated
Orig.
Release Date: 1961
Studio: Criterion
Release
Date: 8/23/2016
Run
Time: 100 Min.
- New, restored 4K digital transfer, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray
- Tony Richardson - in this archival interview,
dierctor Tony Richardson discusses some of the trends that defined the
British New Wave films, the importance of freedom in his work (film and
theater work), the play by Shelagh Delaney that inspired A Taste of Honey
and some of the similarities and differences between the two (Tony
Richardson also directed a stage production of the play), the poetic
quality of the film, its style and atmosphere and some of its key
theatrical qualities, the pictorial qualities of the northern towns in
England, etc. The interview was conducted by critic Gideon Bachman at
the 1962 Cannes Film Festival. In English, not subtitled. (15 min,
1080p).
- Momma Don't Allow (1955) - this short documentary
film was directed by Tony Richardson and Karel Reisz at the Art and Viv
Sanders' Wood Green Jazz Club in North London. It was part of the Free
Cinema movement, whose goal was to depict everyday life and
relationships, which was founded by Tony Richardson, Lindsay Anderson (If....),
and Karel Reisz. The documentary was lensed by cinematographer Walter
Lassally, who also collaborated with Tony Richardson on A Taste of Honey. Music only. (22 min, 1080p).
- The Actors - presented here are two exclusive new
video interviews with actors Rita Tushingham (Jo) and Murray Melvin
(Geoff). The interviews were conducted exclusively for Criterion in
London in May 2016.
- 1. Rita Tushingham - the actress recalls how A Taste of Honey
effectively launched her acting career, and discusses the shooting of
the film in Manchester, her interactions with Tony Richardson and Dora
Bryan, the director's working methods, cinematographer Walter Lassally's
on-location shooting (the bulk of the footage was shot with a hand-held
camera), how important the film was for women's roles in cinema, Jo and
Geoff's relationship, etc. In English, not subtitled. (19 min, 1080p).
- 2. Murray Melvin - Murray Melvin discusses his acting career, his first encounter with Shelagh Delaney, why and how A Taste of Honey
broke all sorts of different barriers (with some very interesting
comments about homosexuality in British cinema and theater during the
1950s), his work with Rita Tushingham, Tony Richardson's working methods
and how he had to adapt to them, the success of the film, etc. In
English, not subtitled. (19 min, 1080p).
- Walter Lassally - in this archival video essay, cinematographer Walker Lassally discusses the production history of A Taste of Honey,
the decision to shoot it on different film stocks (with specific
comments about the grain structure of different segments), the use of
reflected light, the use of the Arriflex camera whose mobility made it
possible to shoot on location and have the intended fluid appearance,
the treatment of light throughout the film, etc. The essay was produced
in 1998. In English, not subtitled. (20 min, 1080i).
- Remaking British Theater - in this new video interview, theater scholar Kate Dorney explains why A Taste of Honey
is important as a play and film, and discusses the state of British
theater during the 1950s, the type of themes that routinely appeared in
plays (and the ones that were not allowed by the censors), the use of
language in the play and the film (rhythm, articulation, delivery), the
censors' attitude towards homosexuality and specifically towards Geoff's
character, etc. The interview was conducted exclusively for Criterion
in London in May 2016. In English, not subtitled. (22 min, 1080p).
- Close-Up - presented here is an archival interview
with playwright Shelagh Delaney in which she discusses her childhood
years in Salford, England, and A Taste of Honey. The interview first aired in 1960 on the television series Close-Up. In English, not subtitled. (16 min, 1080p).
- Leaflet - an illustrated leaflet featuring Colin
MacCabe's essay "Northern Accents" and technical credits. (The author is
a Distinguished Professor of English and Film at the University of
Pittsburgh. His most recent production is The Seasons in Quincy: Four Portraits of John Berger.
The revolutionary British New Wave films of the early 1960s were celebrated for their uncompromising depictions of working-class lives and relations between the sexes. Directed by Tony Richardson, a leading light of that movement, and based on one of the most controversial plays of its time, A Taste of Honey stars Rita Tushingham, in a star-making debut role, as a disaffected teenager finding her way amid the economic desperation of industrial Manchester, and despite an absent, self-absorbed mother. With its unapologetic identification with social outcasts and its sensitive, modern approach to matters of sexuality and race, Richardson's classic is a still startling benchmark work of realism.
|