Peterloo

Peterloo
Date: 16/04/2019 Times: 7:30 pm - 10:06 pm

We’re pleased to be showing our Patron, Mike Leigh’s latest film. Internationally acclaimed and Oscar-nominated, he portrays one of the bloodiest episodes in British history, the infamous Peterloo Massacre of 1819, where government-backed cavalry charged into a peaceful crowd of 80,000 that gathered in Manchester, England to demand democratic reform. Fifteen people were killed and several hundred injured in the ensuing mayhem. The carnage was reported in national and local newspapers. It marked a transformational moment in British history. As the historian EP Thompson noted, ‘the moral consensus of the nation outlawed the riding down of an unarmed crowd’.

Leigh’s achievement is to have made a period film with the same immediacy and sense of anger that runs through contemporary dramas like Hillsborough or Bloody Sunday. He has a huge ensemble cast but that exhaustive attention to detail and fascination with the eccentricities of human behaviour which has always characterised his work is still there.

The film starts four years before Peterloo, with the battle of Waterloo. Leigh doesn’t bother with Wellington or Napoleon. Instead, he homes in on a lone bugler in the middle of the carnage. This is Joseph, a traumatised young man who, after the battle, makes his way home to the north of England, still wearing his red coat. Here, he finds poverty and hardship. Leigh exposes the gaping fissures in British society of the period. He also fills the film with the type of characters you might expect to encounter in a Charles Dickens novel or a Hogarth painting – pompous local dignitaries, Bill Sikes-like blackmailers and conceited army officers. The Prince Regent (Tim McInnerny) is a decadent buffoon. The home secretary Lord Sidmouth (Karl Johnson) is like a more cunning, better spoken, upper-class version of Albert Steptoe. Even ‘orator Hunt’ (Rory Kinnear), who speaks so eloquently on behalf of the common man, is shown in a very ambivalent light. He’s the ‘Wiltshire peacock’, a narcissistic minor celebrity who basks in the adoration of the crowds.

The director’s frame of reference is astonishing. One moment he will be showing us a meeting of the Manchester Female Reform Society and the next we will see the dashing officer General Sir John Byng (Alastair Mackenzie) bunking off at the races when he should be commanding the cavalry in St Peter’s Square. 
Thanks to backing from Amazon Studios, Leigh has a far bigger budget than on any of his previous features. This shows itself not just in the huge cast but in the massacre itself,  in which we see the cavalry charge into the vast crowds. The film doesn’t have a hero. It is about the collective experience of the massacre. The most prominent actors, whether Maxine Peake as a matriarch trying to hold her family together in the face of extreme deprivation or Kinnear as the orator, share screen time with dozens of others.

As a story of a massacre, Peterloo is bound to end on a grim note. However, it has plenty of humour and pathos along the way. The journalists (not a breed Leigh generally likes) emerge with credit for reporting promptly and truthfully on what happened at the Manchester rally. Leigh himself shows he is just as comfortable helming historical epics as he is making tightly focused contemporary dramas like Happy-Go-Lucky or Another Year. At 75, the British director is still clearly at the peak of his powers. Whatever else, his latest film will ensure that the bloody events in St Peter’s Fields nearly 200 years ago are put back on the radar of politicians, historians and cultural commentators alike. 

Click below for reviews and more information.

 

Peterloo

Year: 2018

Country: UK

Cert: 12A

Duration: 156 mins

Dir: Mike Leigh

'Force, grit and brilliance in Mike Leigh's very British massacre.'


Venue: William Loveless Hall