Director Lindsay Anderson and screenwriter David Sherwin continue their story of Mick Travis (Malcolm McDowell), who played the rebellious school boy in the 1969 film IF and the go-getter coffee salesman in the 1973 film O LUCKY MAN! In BRITANNIA HOSPITAL, Mick Travis is now an undercover investigative TV reporter in another allegorical story of the decline of the West. Set in a large, 500-year-old public hospital, BRITANNIA HOSPITAL is a dark, scatter-shot, Swiftian satire of the class conflicts in pre-Thatcher England. The hospital, staffed by megalomaniacal doctors, is in a state of near anarchy as its administration prepares for a visit from The Queen. Striking workers only allow "croakers"--patients near death--into the hospital, the kitchen staff refuses to prepare food until union leaders are bought off with promises of O.B.E.'s, and the head surgeon (Graham Crowden) conducts, with public funds, expensive, deranged experiments, like inventing a modern Dr. Frankenstein, while poor patients are deprived of basic services. On the day of the Royal visit, busloads of protesters arrive, and after a battle with riot police, attempt to prevent the Royal ceremony.
Working in a less apocalyptic and surreal style than the style of O LUCKY MAN!, but still more fantastic than the American comedy THE HOSPITAL, Anderson and Sherwin try to anchor this extremely black comedy to a somewhat realistic setting while still aiming at nothing less than a comic indictment of all the ills of Western culture.
Director Lindsay Anderson takes aim at the medical profession and its mores in this satire, which follows the maniacal goings-on in a London hospital. The zaniness begins when the staff goes on strike. In addition, there are angry demonstrators outside, a mad doctor building his own "Frankenstein," and an ambitious BBC reporter snooping around (who gets footage of that monster). Amidst the chaos, the Queen herself is due to visit -- and could be in for a big surprise...
Shown at the Cannes Film Festival, in competion, May 18, 1982.
1971's THE HOSPITAL is this film's American counterpart.
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85
Letterbox - 1.85
Audio:
Mono - English
Additional Release Material:
Trailers
Production Interviews: Malcolm McDowell - Star
Interactive Features:
Interactive Menus
Scene Access
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Review 1:
"...An outrageous satire on an empire's decline and fall....[There are] several dozen wonderfully inane characters who come and go with breathless speed..."
Source: New York Times
p.C10 03/04/1983
Review 2:
"...It is a witty, unsparing exposé of British manners and mores..."
Source: Variety
05/19/1982