Quadrophenia (1979)
Director
Franc Roddam conceived Quadrophenia as "a film about
young people who had some freedom but no
responsibilities".
He need only have added "drugs, parkas and scooters"
to paint it into England and the decade of peace, love and Harold
Wilson.
It was, however, strangely out of time - An 80s film of Pete
Townshend's 70s rock opera about The Who's 60s following.
Yet Quadrophenia is still much-loved today because it
retains a quaintly ageless edge born of the youthful enthusiasm
that drove it.
22-year-old Phil Daniels is brilliant as the star, Jimmy, ably
supported by Phil Davis (Chalky), Mark Wingett (Dave - Later to
achieve fame and fortune playing PC Carver on The Bill ),
Leslie Ash (Steph) and even proto-punk Toyah (Monkey).
Daniels' Jimmy is only briefly upstaged by Sting - and even
then, only because the script demanded it.
From the rows with parents through sordid parties while friends
parents are away, to the mad weekend and rumbles and rucks at
Brighton, Quadrophenia never over-glamorises yet always
succeeds.
It's a faithful recreation of the original Mod period of 1964 -
65, portraying the acutely image conscious lifestyle and
underlying mood of frustration and honest working-class anger
which exploded in a vicious Mod vs Rocker battle at the seaside on
a Bank Holiday weekend.
In
many ways the template for Trainspotting, Quadrophenia
was a youth film that has grown up with the passing years as its
audiences look upon it, not as an embarrassment from their
childhood, but as a document of their new found maturity.
Pete Townshend acted as consultant on the film, ensuring a
large degree of authenticity. His original score is augmented by
original Mod-era dance hits from the likes of Booker T and the
MG's and The Kingsmen.
Youth culture is notoriously difficult to convey in movies, but
Roddam gets it note perfect.

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