Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (No Skin)
  • No Skin
Collapse

Film Glance Forum

  1. Home
  2. The Cinema
  3. So all this broad did all day was go to the movies and shop…

So all this broad did all day was go to the movies and shop…

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Cinema
14 Posts 1 Posters 0 Views
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • F Offline
    F Offline
    fgadmin
    wrote last edited by
    #5

    IsoldeJaneHolland — 16 years ago(November 09, 2009 08:35 PM)

    Uhm, she was shopping for a birthday present for Fred? A 'wildly extravagant' radio, if I recall. (I know, what's so extravagant about a radio? But she's English, and they're weird.)

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • F Offline
      F Offline
      fgadmin
      wrote last edited by
      #6

      IMDb User

      This message has been deleted.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • F Offline
        F Offline
        fgadmin
        wrote last edited by
        #7

        noirgirl — 15 years ago(March 25, 2011 06:38 AM)

        That was pretty normal then. Housewives would generally stay at their home, and then "go up to town" one day a week, have a day out, shop, lunch, see things, and then go home for another week. Alleviates the boredom. I must say, that was a perfectly dreadful original post!

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • F Offline
          F Offline
          fgadmin
          wrote last edited by
          #8

          Monica_M_C — 15 years ago(March 26, 2011 12:35 AM)

          I would have loved to have at least tried that lifestyle. I crack a rueful smile over Mrs. Bagot's monologue with Beryl when Laura and Alec have tea there after their first date: "I says to [my husband], 'You expect me to be housekeeper, cook, and char all rolled into one and a loving wife when you come home?? Oh, no - there's as much good fish in the sea as ever came out of it' and off I went!" (Or, something along those lines.)
          These days, we're expected to do that AND work the same amount of hours that our men do AND get paid less besides. Crummy deal for today's Fred, crummy deal for today's Laura, crummy deal for today's domestics but a sweetheart deal for the government and business: the former gets the extra taxes, and the latter gets tremendous control over the wages.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • F Offline
            F Offline
            fgadmin
            wrote last edited by
            #9

            michael_wallace_ellwood — 12 years ago(August 24, 2013 04:47 PM)

            It wasn't a radio. It was a clock, with 2 other dials. Presumably a barometer and a temperature gauge.
            Now, it was made in 1945, before the ending of WW2 (and before the end of the war in Europe, what we call VE day), but it was set in the 1930s, probably 1939 from what I have read.
            So in the story, there was no rationing and no shortages. It's conceivable that people sensed there was a war coming, but that does not seem to enter into the story.
            But of course, it was filmed in the war. Carnforth was chosen, apparently, because it was a long way from London (it's in Lancashire), and so they could relax the blackout regulations. (I think German bombing had stopped by then. There was still the danger of V1s ans V2s, but they didn't need lit targets, and probably couldn't reach Lancashire).
            So in reality, there
            were
            shortages, and it seems to me that everyone's clothing looks a bit dull and tired. And according to one source, the food in the refreshment room was fake. (I'm not sure if we see Alec and Laura eating the Bath buns, and of course no one would want to eat "me Banburies" after they had been on the floor).
            By the way, I don't think Laura and Fred were average people by any stretch. We'd think of them as upper middle class. They had at least one servant. Perhaps a cook and a nanny. Fred was probably something in the city or a bank manager. Alec was probably meant to be of a similar social status, and Mary Norton and Dolly Messiter would be the same.
            It would be a matter of pride for people like Fred that his wife didn't have to work. She would probably do voluntary work, and join the WI, and in the war, the WVS. Her "job" was to see to the running of the house, and probably keep an eye on the housekeeping money. She probably had her own money, perhaps a marriage settlement from her father, and would have bought Fred's present out of this money.
            Women of her class could well afford not to work. Even women of much lower status often did not work, before and after the war. During the war, it was a different story.
            EDIT: On the present being a clock and not a radio: Radios would have been enormous in those days. In the 1950s, my parents had a radio that was at least a foot deep, a foot high, and at least 2 feet wide. Transistors were not invented until after the war, and transistor radios didn't become popular until the 1960s. And to give us some idea of domestic electronics in those days, and although it's more than just a radio, the device that Laura uses to listen to Rachmaninov is a radiogram - a combined radio and record player (gramophone). A massive piece of furniture (which admittedly included storage for records, so it was more than just the electro-mechanical-thermionic hardware in there).
            EDIT2: Looking again, Laura definitely is tuning a radio, since we hear another station playing a different style of music before going to the Rachmaninov. It still looks like a radiogram to me, even if in that case she doesn't seem to be putting a record on.

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • F Offline
              F Offline
              fgadmin
              wrote last edited by
              #10

              Sugarminx — 12 years ago(May 28, 2013 05:43 PM)

              Oh to go back to a time when we spoke English
              Tap Tommy

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • F Offline
                F Offline
                fgadmin
                wrote last edited by
                #11

                jimbirish-634-753726 — 12 years ago(June 22, 2013 02:38 PM)

                A simpleminded selfish moron you are and im afraid there is no cure!

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • F Offline
                  F Offline
                  fgadmin
                  wrote last edited by
                  #12

                  robfwoods — 12 years ago(December 08, 2013 05:06 AM)

                  ON THURSDAYS!!!!

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • F Offline
                    F Offline
                    fgadmin
                    wrote last edited by
                    #13

                    teresah233 — 9 years ago(July 15, 2016 10:55 PM)

                    How come the OP didn't notice this? She only went into town on Thursdays!!! She had a routine - check out a new book at Boots, do the marketing for the week, go to lunch and catch a movie and then back home. She seemed to have a maid/cook so she did have an easier life than most but she wasn't out shopping every day.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • F Offline
                      F Offline
                      fgadmin
                      wrote last edited by
                      #14

                      tiburonbirdred — 11 years ago(November 13, 2014 08:47 PM)

                      There needs to be some satirical parallel movie like "Fred's Story" and in the end he could say what the op wrote. And call her a hoecake before he thumps her on the head.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0

                      • Login

                      • Don't have an account? Register

                      Powered by NodeBB Contributors
                      • First post
                        Last post
                      0
                      • Categories
                      • Recent
                      • Tags
                      • Popular
                      • Users
                      • Groups