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My Childhood - The Maxim Gorky Trilogy - Part One [1938]
Director: Bill Douglas
Actors: Stephen Archibald, Hughie Restorick, Jean Taylor Smith, Karl Fieseler, Bernard Mckenna
Studio: Red Pictures
Category: Video

Buy Used: £19.00





Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 1 reviews
Sales Rank: 13694

Format: Black & White, Pal, Subtitled
Language: Russian (Original Language)
Rating: Universal, suitable for all
Media: VHS Tape
Running Time: 97 minutes
Number Of Items: 1
Discs: 1

EAN: 5037270101255
ASIN: B00004CKG9

Theatrical Release Date: 1938
Release Date: March 15, 1999
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • My Way Home [1978]
  • The Hero with a Thousand Faces

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The First Two Parts of Bill Douglas's Celebrated Trilogy   January 15, 2001
 10 out of 11 found this review helpful

These two films form the first two parts of Bill Douglas's childhood trilogy, which are based on the director's own upbringing in the small mining village of Newcraighall, just outside Edinburgh.

Douglas shows the effects of grinding poverty and emotional abuse on his alter-ego, Jamie, played by the late Stephen Archibald, and his half-brother Tommy. This is a world of casual brutality, where hopes are routinely stifled and where almost everyone suffers in silence. There is a palpable sense of nameless loss and grief permeating almost every frame of these films.

My Childhood is perhaps the more lyrical of the two films, showing Jamie achieving some sort of release when he hitches a ride on the coal train after the death of his granny. The scenes in which he befriends the German POW are amongst the most tender in Douglas's output: they are so simple it is almost as if he is filming pure emotion.

My Ain Folk is a much darker film, and is perhaps Bill Douglas's greatest film. The family seems to become more extended and dysfunctional than ever: nameless adults come and go, only stopping long enough to shout and fight and disappear in a cloud of repressed emotion and self-hatred. The awful spectre of Jamie's 'bad' granny looms over the film: a more spiteful - and perhaps pitiful -character I have yet to see. This film has a force that is literally physical.

...Yet for all their cruelty, these are stunningly beautiful and simple films: think of Bresson, but with immeasurably more emotional impact. The trilogy has been described as one of the heroic achievements of cinema, and it is difficult to disagree. Bill Douglas has taken the raw and painful material of his own life to fashion three of the greatest films of all time. These are criminally underrated and neglected films. If you care about cinema you must see them. They will stay with you for ever.



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