Underground
Year: 1928
Production Country: UK
Directed by: Anthony Asquith
Distributed by: A BFI release
Running time: 94min
Certificate: U
The restorarion of Underground was made possible by the generous support of Simon W Wessel.
Celebrate the 150th anniversary of the London Underground with the BFI’s restoration of Anthony Asquith’s subterranean tale of love, jealousy and murder.
Synopsis
We celebrate the 150th anniversary of the London Underground with the BFI’s restoration of Anthony Asquith’s subterranean tale of love, jealousy and murder. Neil Brand’s orchestral score, recorded live last year, perfectly complements the film’s richly detailed evocation of 1920s London.
More than any other film from Britain’s silent canon, Underground (introducing itself as a ‘story of ordinary workaday people whose names are just Nell, Bill, Kate and Bert’) evokes the life of the ordinary Londoner with its scenes of the bustling Underground – the behaviour of the passengers is strikingly familiar – and the capital’s parks, double-decker buses, pubs and shabby bedsits. From his own screenplay Asquith balances the light and dark sides of city life, aided by a superb cast of Brian Aherne and Elissa Landi as the nice young lovers and Norah Baring and Cyril McLaglen as their unhappy counterparts. The 26-year-old’s direction is assured, efficient and spare, with some remarkably cinematic flourishes, clearly inspired by contemporary German and Russian filmmaking but with a few tricks of his own, climaxing with a thrilling chase scene across the rooftops of the Lots Road power station. He was one of few in the British industry to match the audacity of Hitchcock.
Bryony Dixon
Temporary VAT-reduced rate for children: prices have been adjusted for all under 16’s tickets booked between 25 June and 1 September for screenings during the same period. BFI Riverfront will be closed until 5pm on 9 July.
BFI Membership
Become a BFI Member from £44 to enjoy priority booking as well as other great benefits all year round.
Join today
BFI Player
See something different
Stream hand-picked films from £6.99 per month.
Start with 14 days free