The National Health (film) explained

The National Health
Director:Jack Gold
Starring:Lynn Redgrave
Colin Blakely
Eleanor Bron
Donald Sinden
Jim Dale
Cinematography:John Coquillon
Editing:Ralph Sheldon
Music:Carl Davis
Color Process:Eastmancolor
Studio:Virgin Films
Distributor:Columbia Pictures
Runtime:98 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

The National Health is a 1973 British black comedy film directed by Jack Gold and starring Lynn Redgrave, Colin Blakely and Eleanor Bron.[1] [2] It is based on the 1969 play The National Health by Peter Nichols, in which the staff struggle to cope in a NHS hospital.

Plot

The film satirically interweaves the story of a depressing and poorly-equipped National Health Service hospital with a fantasy hospital which exists in a soap-opera world where all the equipment is new and patients are miraculously cured – although the only "patients" seen are doctors or nurses who are themselves part of the soap opera plots. In the real hospital, the patients die while the out-of-touch administrators focus on impressing foreign visitors.

Cast

Production

Producer Ned Sherrin said that he wanted Michael Blakemore, who had directed the play on stage, to direct the film but Columbia would not approve him.[3]

Filming location

The hospital scenes were shot at Red Barracks, Woolwich, which stood in as the fictional Princess Maria of Battenberg Hospital.[4]

Reception

According to Sherrin, the film "did well" in England but was not released in the US for another decade.[3]

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The National Health is M.A.S.H. without the mayhem – an unsentimental, uncomfortably comic and barely exaggerated portrayal of British welfare medicine, the most well-meaning on earth, but dispiritingly undermanned, depersonalised, and bogged down in bedpans and logistics. "Here in England", observes Jim Dale's lugubrious ward orderly, "we have as high a standard of dying as anywhere in the free world". The only reminder, in fact, that the nearest one usually gets to this kind of comment is Carry On Nurse is the presence of Jim Dale, though that is meant to be far from disparaging: he all but steals the picture with his portrait of cheerfully cynical vulgarity, relishing Nichols' best lines ("One slip", he quips as he shaves a patient in preparation for an abdominal operation, "and Bob's your auntie!") and neatly rounding out the role with the cold sneer he gives to departing patients over whom he has affectionately fussed. The acting throughout is flawless, with perhaps the best moments provided by Clive Swift's basket-weaving ulcer victim, Colin Blakely's grumbling amnesiac, Lynn Redgrave's devoted, put-upon nurse, and Donald Sinden – in one of several double cameos – as a brash consultant ("Your bum any better ?") and soap opera surgeon ("To err is hooman")."[5]

Leslie Halliwell said: "Acerbic comedy from a National Theatre play which mixes tragedy and farce into a kind of Carry on Dying."[6]

The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 3/5 stars, writing: "Director Jack Gold assembles some sprightly set pieces and fine actors (Donald Sinden, Lynn Redgave, Jim Dale) who give real clout to the sometimes contrived satire."[7]

References

  1. Web site: The National Health . 17 March 2024 . British Film Institute Collections Search.
  2. Web site: The National Health (1973). https://web.archive.org/web/20090117035603/http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/43839. dead. 17 January 2009. 13 August 2018.
  3. Book: Sherrin, Ned. Ned Sherrin : the autobiography. 2006 . Time Warner. 214.
  4. Web site: The National Health. London Location. 15 August 2024.
  5. 1 January 1973 . The National Health . . 40 . 468 . 80 . ProQuest.
  6. Book: Halliwell, Leslie . Halliwell's Film Guide . Paladin . 1989 . 0586088946 . 7th . London . 716.
  7. Book: Radio Times Guide to Films . . 2017 . 9780992936440 . 18th . London . 649.