I thought this was going to be Scum — which is probably Alan Clarke’s most famous movie? But it’s Funny Farm instead.
So… this is like a series of tragic fates — people who’ve ended up in an asylum, one way or another.
I like it, but it’s a bit… er… you know. It feels like it’s going to teach us something. Yuck! We hate that, don’t we, lad?
That’s what I want my living room to look like!
OK, now I’m over it.
Yeah:
The working day of nurse Alan Welbeck at a psychiatric ward. Points out the conditions in UK mental hospitals – understaffing, overwork, bad pay, old inadequate buildings and unsatisfactory patient treatment and cure.
It seems more designed to state a position than to make a proper TV theatre.
Uh-oh.
This was broadcast the same year as One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest was released, so there was something in the air…
It’s very didactic.
One major difference between this and the Forman film is that everybody here is basically well-meaning. There’ no Nurse Ratched. It’s just an underfunded, understaffed hospital.
That’s all the condiments you need: Salt and brown sauce.
At the start of this movie, I was into it. And then it got really heavy handed — basically a PSA for “Psychiatric Institutions Should Be Better Funded”. But then at the end, I was quite moved by all these quiet stories being told.
Nothing actually “happens” in this thing — it’s just a peek into the lives of some pretty sympathetic people in a difficult situation. It couldn’t be more low key if it tried, and I respect that.
Funny Farm. Alan Clarke. 1975. ⚃











































































