I'd seen the brilliant BBC adaptation many years, but this version caught the spirit of the book as well.
Here are my notes:
James
Kent began his career as a director by working on EastEnders before moving on to TV movies and bigger budget series. His most recent work in both the US and UK has
included Agatha Christie: Poirot, Margaret
(tracing the final days of Margaret Thatcher in power) and several episodes of
the historical drama The White Queen. Testament
of Youth is his first film for cinema.
Here are my notes:
Testament
of Youth
UK 2014 129
minutes
Director: James
Kent
Starring: Alicia Vikander, Kit
Harington, Taron Egerton, Dominic West, Emily Watson and Miranda Richardson
“A
fine and moving film, if heavy-handed in places. The screen version of Testament of Youth gilds the lily of Vera Brittain’s memoir – though fans of
the book may well feel it didn’t need so much extra adornment.”
Alex von
Tunzelmann
Awards and Nominations
·
Best Actress Nomination for Alicia
Vikander at the British Independent Film Awards
·
Best Breakthrough British Filmmaker
Nomination for James Kent at the London Critics Circle Film Awards
·
Best British Newcomer Nomination for
Taron Egerton at the London Film Festival
After
winning a place to read English at Oxford University in 1915 Vera Brittain
decides to delay her degree so that she can work as a Voluntary Aid Detachment during
the First World War. Her fiancé Roland Leighton, close friends Victor
Richardson and Geoffrey Thurlow and her brother Edward have all enlisted, and as
the war progresses all are killed. After the war Vera Brittain became a
pacifist.
Vera
Brittain published Testament of Youth
in 1933 having previously tried and failed to write about her wartime
experiences in fictional form. The book was well received but it failed to
achieve the “classic” status of books about wartime experience such as Goodbye to All That by Robert Graves and
Memoirs of a Foxhunting Man and Memoirs of an Infantry Officer by
Siegfried Sassoon. Even the fiftieth
anniversary of WW1 in the 1960s (where the appearance of Oh What A Lovely War together with the arrival of feminism prompted a re-appraisal of the history
of the period) failed to bring it to wider audience. The book only became widely known in in the
1970s when the feminist publishing house Virago Press republished the book and
it became their best-selling title, and then in 1979 the BBC produced a superb
five part adaptation with Cheryl Campbell as Vera.