Victim (1961)

Dirk Bogarde’s trailblazing performance is at the centre of this landmark gay classic.
‘I wanted him!’ With these words Dirk Bogarde consigned his matinee idol alter-ego to history, and a gripping landmark in gay cinema was born. Bogarde’s closeted, married lawyer Melville Farr is drawn into exposing a terrifying blackmail ring when an admirer (Peter McEnery) commits suicide rather than implicate him. Supporting the recommendations of the Wolfenden Committee, director Basil Dearden, producer Michael Relph and screenwriter Janet Green denounced the poisonous, institutionalised homophobia gay men of all classes faced, and cleverly packaged the politics within an accessible crime-thriller. Victim, and Bogarde’s courageous appearance in it, helped propel public discourse towards the 1967 Act and beyond – changing lives in the process.
1961 United Kingdom
Directed by
Basil Dearden
Produced by
Michael Relph
Written by
Janet Green, John McCormick
Featuring
Dirk Bogarde, Sylvia Syms, Dennis Price
Running time
100 minutes

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