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Home > Classic Movies > Musicals & Music > The London Nobody Knows / Les Bicyclettes de Belsize

Recommended The London Nobody Knows / Les Bicyclettes de Belsize

Douglas Hickox, Norman Cohen, 1967, 1969

Star Review

Here is a thoroughly enjoyable pairing of quirky, late 1960s London-set time capsules on celluloid. The London Nobody Knows, from 1967, written by the great celebrant of overlooked London Geoffrey Fletcher, and narrated by James Mason in a tone of compassionate, world-weary gentility so fitting to the needs of the film, is an elegy for the remnants of a bygone age before the capital's extensive redevelopment. Mason visits dray horse yards and Victorian public conveniences, pointing out sewer ventilating lamps and egg-breaking plants along the way. He walks the floor of the derelict Bedford Theatre in Camden High Street, tattered, blackened, broken and flaking, where Marie Lloyd sang and Walter Sickert sketched, and visits a Salvation Army hostel, and meets the down on their luck, the meths drinkers, the scarred, the scared and the oblivious – an unexpected sequence in a film that begins with scenes reminiscent of a ‘Sykes silent’ building skit. The accompanying soundtrack too is just as eclectic in approach, taking in music hall songs and unexpected analogue electronic experiments.

Les Bicyclettes de Belsize is a slight but utterly charming musical short, set in Hampstead village circa 1969. (It was, by the by, filmed by Wolfgang Suschitzky, whose son Peter has just presented a far darker picture of London as DoP on Cronenberg’s Eastern Promises). Anthony May plays the bicyclist who falls in love with poster girl Julie after crashing through a billboard with her giant face. In a delirious clash of colours reminiscent of The Umbrellas of Cherbourg – he canary yellow trousers, matching silk scarf, orange socks, she (Miss Huxtable’s wardrobe supllied by Medusa, Chelsea’), magenta trouser suit and scarlet felt hat, they meet, fall in love, part, and lthen ong for each other in an alternative filmic world where Blow-Up has never happened and wistful romance defeats cynicism entirely. The title track was a hit for Engelbert Humperdinck.

Graeme Hobbs on 4th February 2008

View all 228 of Graeme Hobbs’s reviews

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Film Details

Director

Douglas Hickox, Norman Cohen

Year

1967, 1969

Country

UK

Cast

James Mason, Judy Huxtable, Anthony May

Technical Details

Certificate

PG

Length

73 mins

Label

OPTIM

Format

DVD Colour

Region

2

Cat No

OPTD1142

Main Language

English

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