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Another Country

Another Country

  • Status: Released
  • 01-06-1984
  • Runtime: 87 min
  • Score: 6.5
  • Vote count: 158

In Moscow in 1983, an American journalist interviews Guy Bennett, who recalls his last year at public school, fifty years before, and how it contributed to him becoming a spy.

Rupert Everett

Guy Bennett

Colin Firth

Tommy Judd

Michael Jenn

Barclay

Robert Addie

Delahay

Rupert Wainwright

Donald Devenish

Cary Elwes

James Harcourt

Tristan Oliver

Fowler

Anna Massey

Imogen Bennett

Philip Dupuy

Martineau

Guy Henry

Head Boy

Adrian Ross Magenty

Wharton

Geoffrey Bateman

Yevgeni

Frederick Alexander

Menzies

Jeffry Wickham

Arthur

Gideon Boulting

Trafford

Llewellyn Rees

Senior Chaplain

Ivor Roberts

Chief Judge

Crispin Redman

Prefect

Nicholas Rowe

Spungin

Betsy Brantley

Julie Schofield

Kathleen St John

Ivy

Martin Wenner

Batsman 1

Christopher Milburn

Batsman 2

Tristram Jellinek

Nicholson

Tristram Wymark

Henderson

Ralph Perry-Robinson

Robbins

Arthur Howard

Waiter

CinemaSerf

Told by way of a interview retrospective, this is a tale of disillusionment and political naivety amongst the English upper classes in the 1930s. Guy Bennett (Rupert Everett) was a student at Cambridge University - openly gay to his fellow students - on the periphery of the social and political norms of the day. His friend Tommy Judd (Colin Firth) and he bonded largely out of a desire for non-conformity, not because they believed in the same ideals; Firth a fervent Marxist, Everett ambitious - perhaps because of his sexuality - to reach the top of the hierarchical structure at the school. He falls in love, however - with the younger James Harcourt (Cary Elwes) and all the blind-eyes that had previously been turned to his behaviour were turned full beam and his behaviour, and to some extent that of Judd are challenged to breaking point. Julian Mitchell's play has been self-adapted to demonstrate just how insidious the educational establishment could be for those who did not play the game; and how empowering it could be for the ultra-conformist bullies (in this film deftly portrayed by Tristan Oliver as Fowler) and it is little wonder these academic institutions became an intellectual petrie dish for those recruiting future espionage assets. The film looks gorgeous - though filmed in Oxford - with a gently complementary score from Michael Storey.