The Operation (film)
4 /10 1 Votes
Duration Language English | Director Roy Battersby Country United Kingdom | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Release date February 1973 Based on novel Ludo by Roger Smith |
The Operation is a 1973 British television film for BBC1's Play for Today about an asset stripper trying to buy up a row of houses.
Contents
Plot summary
David, a property magnate, returns to his old home town to develop a site. He has an affair with the wife of a grocer whose building is coveted by David. The grocer ends up shooting David.
Cast
Reception
The TV critic for The Times called it a "tedious affair":
The males had got lost somewhere between John Osborne's Angry Young Men and some future sequel to Last Tango in Paris... We had wife swappings, a casino, a lavatory, an Irish hideaway, Rolls Royces and other environmental titbits... Influenced no doubt by the presence of a film star in the cast the camera lingered self consciously on profiles when it was not lingering self consciously even more on the furniture. George Lazenby, the star in question, brought to the part of the magnate a lazy, self conscious insolence that suited the odious fellow well. The rest had little to do except let the camera wander over their faces.
The Spectator called it:
As insulting a piece of meretricious rubbish as I have seen in a long and weary while... a jejune fantasy of power and wealth. George Lazenby... [acts] with all the life and conviction of a garden gnome... Why not just laugh the whole thing off as a silly piece of nonsense? Why feel angry? Because this was put out by the BBC as a serious treatment of serious themes, a 'play for today,' God help us. In this context I found it insulting.
Controversy
The play led to the BBC being criticised by its advisory council for its use of bad language, and depiction of sexual blackmail and wife swapping.
References
The Operation (film) WikipediaThe Operation (film) IMDb