Friday, 9 May 2008

Withnail and... what?

I've just listened to The Reunion on Radio 4, bringing together some of the principal creators of the great, great film Withnail and I. Two things jumped out at me and really made me think, especially about the 60s. How British was the 60s? How English?

Richard E Grant spoke of Englishness and "the nobility of failure and permission to fail". Well, I loved that of course. Failure is very rich fertiliser for learning and the birth of new ideas. The British do culturally embrace failure, and I realised it's not about the vain, empty pompous gesture and the stiff upper lip, but about

Richard Griffiths (Uncle Monty in the film) pointed to Danny the dealer's great line at the end of the film - "We are 91 days from the end of the greatest decade in history, and there's going to be a lot of refugees." I'd never considered the great significance of the line before, but it's there in spades. There's been a decade of socio-cultural revolution; people have, up to this point, been able to know that they're actually IN the Sixties, the fabulous Swinging Sixties. By the same token, very soon they're going to be not in it any more. Where next for the revolutionaries, and for those who were displaced by the revolution? It's interesting that the very character who utters the line resurfaces in Wayne's World 2 to answer his own implicit question. (He by now is the world's greatest rock n roll tour manager.)

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