49 Up Movie Review
49 Up Review
"49 Up" Overview

Rating: NR
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Michael AptedProducer : Michael Apted,Claire Lewis
Screenwiter :
Starring : Bruce Balden,Jacqueline Bassett,Symon Basterfield,Andrew Brackfield,John Brisby,Michael Apted
I admit I've given Michael Apted a hard time about the Up series in the past.
Recent installments have been meandering and have seemed to lose focus over
what the series is really all about. In the last couple of films, Apted has
erred toward sensationalism rather than introspection.
49 Up marks a return to basics and fine form. It's a more thoughtful
documentary about life in England, and a better-organized one than the past
entries. Finally, for the first time in years, the stories are told with grace
and power, and the film really sucks you in. Now that Apted is in his 60s and
he's hitting Up with its seventh installment, maybe he's finally determined the
best way to present this material.
At 2 hours, 13 minutes, the film is actually seven minutes shorter than 42 Up,
finally halting an inexorable creep toward infinite length that found Apted
trying to jam more and more footage into each movie. This helps a lot. He
carefully divides time among the 12 remaining cast members (two of the original
players have dropped out), both giving them time to discuss their lives today
vs. contrasting that with what they said in the past.
One player (and forgive me for not keeping all the names straight) says in his
youth that he can't imagine keeping a job as a laborer for more than a year or
so. At 49, he's still handling freight at Heathrow and has no plans to leave.
Other characters have been remarkably prescient about where their lives would
go. The wealthier boys went to Cambridge or Oxford and became barristers, just
as they said they would.
One of the women complains for most of her screen time that Apted hasn't
portrayed her fairly. Basically she exudes vitriol for 10 minutes, directed at
Apted. Obviously she's been carrying this grudge for decades. Meanwhile, we see
vividly how "reality" shows can impact a person who, theoretically, is only
being "observed."
Inarguably the most fascinating tale is that of Neil, who had a promising life
in his teens but was homeless by 28. In a turnaround story of almost impossible
proportions, he's turned his life around and is now a local politician and
respected member of his rural town. It's a jaw-dropping change to observe.
I'm not sure this is a great film to see theatrically (and it's been produced
for television primarily), but it's certainly a film that, for the first time
in a long while, it's one I'd recommend you see in some format or another.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



