Hope and Glory
- PG-13
- Year:
- 1987
- 113 min
- 730 Views
INT. ROHAN HOUSE - BACK GARDEN - SEPTEMBER 1939 - DAY
COLOUR:
Raking down a line of suburban gardens lit by a late-summer
sun. Heads move back and forth above the fences that divide
the narrow strips of land, moving to the sound of unseen
lawn mowers.
In one of these gardens two children, BILL (aged eight) and
his sister SUE (aged six) disport themselves. They are
sprawled out on the lawn, heads and hands intent on
something hidden from view in the lush vegetation of a
rockery garden. Beneath those flowers and plants is a dark
and mysterious forest, shaded by huge leaves, and broken up
by towering boulders. Mounted figures of medieval knights
ride in, guided by BILL'S gigantic hand. A wizard appears
in the path of the riders who draw up sharply. BILL gives
an impression of neighing horses. SUE'S face looms up
between large leaves. She makes the sound of spooky wind.
INT. ROHAN HOUSE - DINING/LIVING ROOM - DAY
In the penumbra of the room, the mother, GRACE, in droopy
flowered frock, crosses, floats towards the walnut wireless
and, with trembling hand, switches it on. Its green dial
glows with stations like Droitwich and Hilversum. She
glides back and drapes herself behind an armchair in which
her husband, CLIVE, sits solemn and motionless.
EXT. ROHAN HOUSE - GARDEN - DAY
The sound of the lawn-mower ceases abruptly. BILL looks up
sharply. The neighbours' heads come to rest on top of the
garden fences. They turn, listening. BILL inclines his head
towards the french windows, sensing the dread moment. He
walks towards the door and is framed there. He regards his
parents.
INT. ROHAN HOUSE - DINING/LIVING ROOM - DAY
They look back with unseeing, inward-turned eyes. Young
BILL gathers confused fragments of the fateful
announcement.
CHAMBERLAIN (V.O)
...those assurances... by eleven
o'clock... a state of war... that
this country... at war with
Germany.
The boy catches his mother's eye. She smiles en embarrassed
smile. The boy is embarrassed by her embarrassment. His
father's glassy solemnity angers him. In the garden, SUE
sings.
SUE (O.S.)
(singing)
Flat foot floogie with a Floy
Floy.
BILL turns to his sister.
BILL:
Stop that, Sue!
CLIVE is startled out of his funereal reverie.
BILL:
She just sings it. She doesn't
know what it means.
An older sister, DAWN, a tumescent fifteen, stumbles into
the room in a nightdress.
DAWN:
Where are my stockings? I can't
find my stockings!
Her mother, GRACE, interrupts her with outstretched arms.
GRACE:
Dawn, darling. They've started a
war again.
GRACE says it as though announcing that dinner is served,
but her voice is torn by a sob as she holds DAWN in her
arms.
GRACE:
(Whispering and sobbing)
We mustn't frighten the little
ones.
DAWN is appalled by her mother's display of sentiment. She
wrenches free.
DAWN:
I don't care! I want my
stockings!
CLIVE get's up, blazing. He seizes DAWN and shakes her.
CLIVE:
Stockings? War! Don't you
understand! War!
DAWN:
I don't care!
CLIVE:
War! War!
GRACE inserts herself between them.
GRACE:
Clive. Don't. Dawn, please.
EXT. ROHAN HOUSE - GARDEN - DAY
BILL calls out from the garden. He is jumping up and down,
pointing at the sky.
BILL:
German planes! German planes!
They run out. GRACE sweeps little SUE into her arms, buring
her face in her bosom and rushing back into the shelter of
the house. DAWN and CLIVE scan the sky for planes, There
are none.
BILL:
I did see them. I did.
DAWN:
He's the worst liar.
DAWN swings a fist at BILL and chases him inti the room,
raining savage blows upon him.
INT. ROHAN HOUSE - DINING/LIVING ROOM - DAY
Father is white with rage. He seizes them, one in each
hand. Mother cowers with SUE.
CLIVE:
These are the fruits of my loins?
DAWN lunges at BILL. The GRANDMOTHER enters, tall, frail,
elegant, ga-ga, deaf.
GRANDMA:
Is it peace in out time?
GRACE:
(shouting)
No, Mother! It's War! War!
GRANDMA:
Or what?
GRACE:
War! War! War!
The wireless begins to play 'God Save the King'. Father
immediately lets go of the children and stands rigidly to
attention.
The others simmer down and shuffle into stiff and still
poses. GRANDMOTHER, who perhaps cannot hear the Anthem, is
baffled, shakes her head.
EXT. ROSEHILL AVENUE - DAY
The sirens sound. A shocking blast of noises, the sickening
ululations of the air-raid warning. They call out over the
rows of bow-fronted semi-detached, lower-middle-class
houses. Some of the occupants, more daring or more confused
than their neighbours, burst out of their front doors,
turning in frenzied circles, craning at the heavens.
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