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42 Up
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Directed by Michael Apted
In 1964, England's Granada Television produced a documentary called 7 Up, in which 14 seven-year-old British children from a wide variety of social and economic backgrounds were interviewed about their ideas and opinions on the adult world. In 1971, director Michael Apted tracked down the same youngsters for a follow-up, 7 Plus 7. Since then, Apted has revisited his subjects every seven years in a series of remarkable films that allow us to watch these children grow into adults before our eyes. In the sixth film in the series, we visit eleven of the now middle-aged kids (three have chosen not to participate), as they settle contentedly (for the most part) into mid-life and contend with the growing maturity of their own children and, in some cases, the infirmity and death of their parents. Tony, who once dreamed of being a jockey, now drives a cab, does a bit of television acting, and admits to being unfaithful to his wife. Suzy, who at 21 was bitter and cynical with no intention of having kids, is now a happy mother who works part-time as a bereavement counselor. Neil, who has struggled through years of mental illness, poverty, and homelessness, was elected as a Liberal Democratic representative to the Hackney council in London and seems to have found stability. Paul, who was raised by divorced parents and suffered from poor self-esteem as a child, now has a fine home in Australia and has been happily married for 23 years. And Simon, a West Indian immigrant raised in a children's home, is happy, middle-class, and raising a four-year-old of his own. Ironically, Apted's latest installment in this compelling but low-key ongoing project was set for international release within months of the highest-profile film of his career, the James Bond adventure The World Is Not Enough. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian The Up Series (1964-20??, Great ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
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"The Up series asks gets at the core questions of humanity. Are we the way we are because of nature or nurture? Are we essentially set for life at age seven, or do we have agency to change our lives and our class status? In addition the q " [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 ([More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
The appearance of the sixth installment of Michael Apted's brilliantly conceived and executed series of films tracing the lives and fortunes of a diverse group of Britishers coincided with the rise of what is now called "reality television." On shows like Survivor and Fear Factor, viewers are allowed glimpses into how so-called ordinary people will behave in extreme situations. The Up series is the antithesis of this trumped-up scenario; it allows life to go on unrecorded, save for a drop-in by Apted and his crew every seven years. The scenes of domestic life -- the husband and wife playing with the kids in the garden or walking through the streets on a shopping trip -- are the film's least interesting moments because, like the reality shows, they're manufactured. It's when the subjects become talking heads and have to play catch-up on their lives and reflect on the previous seven years that this series trumps the reality shows. There is little extreme behavior recorded here; the worst-off person, Neil, is, by the time this installment was filmed, on the rebound from years of homelessness and debilitating mental problems. But it is the unexpected turn of events -- a woman who once claimed she wouldn't want any children and is now a loving mum -- or the obstacles that people overcome -- another woman raising three energetic boys on her own, despite debilitating arthritis -- that grab and hold your attention. No cheap thrills here, just an honest and heartfelt examination of the vicissitudes of life. ~ Tom Wiener, All Movie Guide
 

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