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Seven Up
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The British documentary Seven Up originated in 1963 as a 31-minute episode of the highly acclaimed Granada Television series World in Action. Acting upon the venerable Jesuit edict "Give me a child until he is seven, and I will give you the man," director Paul Almond and his young team of assistants randomly selected a group "typical" seven-year-old British children from the ranks of the private-school system. In various locations and situations, the filmmakers interviewed the kids about their backgrounds, their present lives, and their hopes and dreams for the future. Of the interviewees -- ten boys (one of them black), four girls -- six were drawn from the financially strapped working class, four from the privileged upper class, and four from what was vaguely defined as British middle class. Not surprisingly, the upper-class youngters are already reading all the "right" newspapers, carefully plotting out their adult careers, and generally behaving in a patronizing manner to their interviewers. Of the working-class youngsters, East Ender Tony seems to have the clearest vision of what he wanted to do with his life; he intends to be a professional jockey, and is eager and willing to work up the ranks in pursuit of that goal. Viewers who tuned in back in 1963 were most affected by the story of middle-class youngsters Nick, Bruce, and especially Neil, a lonely, sickly looking Liverpudlian lad who aspires to be a tour-bus driver. Intended as a one-shot project, Seven Up took on a life of its own when one of Paul Almond's assistants, 22-year-old Michael Apted, thought it would be fascinating to keep tabs on the 14 children and update their stories at seven-year intervals. With this in mind, Apted -- becoming a full-fledged director himself -- rounded up the kids in 1970 for a follow-up TV documentary, Seven Plus Seven. Thus began what amount to a lifelong creative mission for Michael Apted, yielding such fascinating, and, at times, heartrending filmed studies as 21 Up (1977), 28 Up (1984), 35 Up (1991), and 42 Up (1998). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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estelaestela Reality tv before big brother
by estela in estela Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"7 up series is a revelation a firstly BBC series on the premise "show me a child at 7 and I will show you the man". Is facinating insight of genetics vs nurture.Before reality tv became a genre and having an emmy award category dedicated to it. This series is the first to show that real people and normal lives are the most compelling characters that any film could ever re enact . Very watchable very recommeded do yourself a favor and watch the paths of 7 yearolds to adulthood. " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re:TOP 5 MOVIES TO TEACH AN ALI ...
by Risselada in Filmgaming
hasn't rated it.
"1. The 7 Up series. Ok, I haven't even seen it all yet, but so far it seems to say more about humanity, it's journey, it's internal and outward struggles and joys more than anything else. 2. Planet Earth. Let's not be so conceited to only present them with HUMAN life on earth. Of course David Attenborough's narration will reveal our penchant for hyperbole. 3. The Singing Detective. Here we get the exploration of a character's self throughout his entire life. We see how the events of his life are like a mystery when trying to look through his memory for clues as to the way he is. Isn't this search the goal of all good art? And we get to see how art informs life and back again. We get some good meta-fiction and a portrayal of several different genres as genres inform our lives. Musicals, film noir, mystery, drama, comedy, all of it. And I named the American version instead of the original because it is great, and not just so I could break my trend of series that have come f ... " [More]
VettelVettel The Story of Your Life, 7 Years ...
by Vettel in Vettel Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Overall, an interesting, sometimes compelling look at an array of several people within differing British social classes, beginning from age 7 (for me, the most interesting entry in the series). Subsequent chapters (the filmmakers return to the subjects every 7 years) rely a bit too heavily on past footage to help explain each person's story - good if you've missed a previous installment, but if you're all caught up, and just wanting to see the latest, your fast-forward button will definitely get overused. Definitely a view-worthy documentary. " [More]
HairyLimeHairyLime Way Up There
by HairyLime in HairyLime Blog
loved it.
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"Picked up a compilation disc of the 'Up Series' (includes through 42 Up) at the library yesterday afternoon. This is a series I'd long wanted to watch in its entirety. I'd seen bits and pieces of some of the later ones before, and it always intrigued me. Yesterday evening and afternoon we watched the first two entries (Seven Up and 7 Plus Seven), and hope to watch the remaining episodes over the next week or so.Very interesting, especially the contrasts among the different classes and upbringing, the differing attitudes towards wealth and life goals, love, education, hopes and dreams. Some of the kids you will take a liking too (I'm already quite fond of Tony the boy who wants to be a jockey), and some you will take a dislike to, others you will be puzzled by, and some you will worry about where they are headed in life.Fascinating idea of checking in on the same kids every seven years, I have noticed in my own life how the seven year cycle seems to bring distinc ... " [More]
JimBellJimBell Seven Up
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Seven Up and 7 Plus Seven (on one DVD) are the start of a great documentary project. The film makers chose 14 boys and girls from different classes in England and decided to follow them for decades. The initial film had as its guiding motto “Give me a boy until he is seven and I will show you the man.” The documentary wanted to look at the managers and shop stewards of the year 2000. The kids are not cute: they are interesting people. The power of the documentary becomes obvious when the kids are seen again at age 14. The change in some is amazing. The energetic imaginative little guy who was the closest to being cute at seven became a serious drudge. The young lad from the Yorkshire farm who had stood up to the film makers when he was seven was so shy at fourteen that he would not look at the camera. I kept thinking that for the parents the change would be gradual but also so drastic that the parents would have to deal with a person who was far removed from the one wh ... " [More]
 



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