This course is based on the analysis and evaluation of different approaches to social realism in the English cinema since 1960. In particular, I will look at how the director reflects the life of British in his movies, and how social life and reality are expressed in other movies. A dirty and messy image of a kitchen photographed by a British artist John Brayby in 1954 is a realism that criticizes Brotteby's style called "kitchen sink realism" - the kitchen bowl in the scene.
In order to fully understand the origins and ideals behind British social realism campaign it is necessary not only to explore the history of this movie but also to study the relationship between cinema and other art forms. Social realism, also called social realism, is an art movement expressed in movies or other graphic arts depicting workers' class activities. The line of realism dates back to the art of the 19th century. Along with the decline of the Romantic movement, artists are expressing the world in a more direct way and trying to create objective world expressions based on observations of modern life. Characteristics of Individual and State Realism is independent, including the activities of that subject and social class, until that era is considered not worth the performance in art.
Working class movies, known as British social realism, link individuals in their environment with "clarification of specific forms of social commentary". Filmmakers such as Lindsay Anderson, Karel Reisz, Tony Richardson, and others began to produce this kind of movies not necessarily for change, but to provide ways for the working class to express and express opinions It was. According to Eley (1995), with regard to style, the image and stereotype of the "traditional working class culture" presented in many movies has historically become a specific form of the 1880s and 1940s I go back. Bill Brandt Photography, D. H. Lawrence's novel, George Gaskell's news report
Kitchen sink realism (or kitchen sink drama) is a term used to describe British cultural movements developed in the drama, art, fiction, movies and television from the late 1950s to the early 1960s, using society I will. Realistic style The hero can be described as an angry young man often, depicting the domestic situation of a working-class British living in a narrow rental housing, drinking their non-working hours with a dirty bar, Problems exploring society and political controversy