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Darling

  • 1965
  • TV-MA
  • 2h 8m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
8.4K
YOUR RATING
Julie Christie in Darling (1965)
Beautiful but amoral model Diana Scott sleeps her way to the top of the London fashion scene at the height of the Swinging Sixties.
Play trailer2:48
1 Video
99+ Photos
DramaRomance

Beautiful but amoral model Diana Scott sleeps her way to the top of the London fashion scene at the height of the Swinging Sixties.Beautiful but amoral model Diana Scott sleeps her way to the top of the London fashion scene at the height of the Swinging Sixties.Beautiful but amoral model Diana Scott sleeps her way to the top of the London fashion scene at the height of the Swinging Sixties.

  • Director
    • John Schlesinger
  • Writers
    • Frederic Raphael
    • John Schlesinger
    • Joseph Janni
  • Stars
    • Julie Christie
    • Dirk Bogarde
    • Laurence Harvey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    8.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Schlesinger
    • Writers
      • Frederic Raphael
      • John Schlesinger
      • Joseph Janni
    • Stars
      • Julie Christie
      • Dirk Bogarde
      • Laurence Harvey
    • 83User reviews
    • 63Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 3 Oscars
      • 17 wins & 8 nominations total

    Videos1

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    Trailer 2:48
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    Photos121

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    Top cast99+

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    Julie Christie
    Julie Christie
    • Diana Scott
    Dirk Bogarde
    Dirk Bogarde
    • Robert Gold
    Laurence Harvey
    Laurence Harvey
    • Miles Brand
    José Luis de Vilallonga
    José Luis de Vilallonga
    • Prince Cesare della Romita
    • (as Jose Luis De Vilallonga)
    Roland Curram
    Roland Curram
    • Malcolm
    Basil Henson
    • Alec Prosser-Jones
    Helen Lindsay
    Helen Lindsay
    • Felicity Prosser-Jones
    Carlo Palmucci
    Carlo Palmucci
    • Curzio della Romita
    Dante Posani
    • Gino
    Umberto Raho
    Umberto Raho
    • Palucci
    Marika Rivera
    • Woman
    Alex Scott
    Alex Scott
    • Sean Martin
    Ernst Walder
    • Kurt
    Brian Wilde
    Brian Wilde
    • Willett
    Pauline Yates
    • Estelle Gold
    Peter Bayliss
    Peter Bayliss
    • Lord Grant
    Richard Bidlake
    • Rupert Crabtree
    T.R. Bowen
    • Tony Bridges
    • (as Trevor Bowen)
    • Director
      • John Schlesinger
    • Writers
      • Frederic Raphael
      • John Schlesinger
      • Joseph Janni
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews83

    7.08.4K
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    Featured reviews

    trpdean

    One of the very best

    I find this movie unique. If you have read of, or can remember the mid-1960s, you know that the character Julie Christie plays was absolutely the one adored by everyone- by all who considered themselves "in" and "trendy" and "modern". And she is completely taken apart by this movie.

    I can think of only one other movie at any time in any language that so thoroughly demolishes the pretensions of the very people whom the smart set aspired to be at the time the movie was coming out. Amazingly that movie was 'Alfie', that came out about that same year. (A movie like La Dolce Vita is in a different mode - the people are the new meretricious post-war haute bourgeois class - a frequent target through history, and in that way, like The Ice Storm or Interiors or American Beauty as an attack on such values).

    Virtually all "serious satires" take on targets that the "chattering classes" consider suspect - the hidebound, the hypocritical, the "authority figures" whom youth wish to overturn. Not this one. Astonishingly, in the midst of mod London, the very middle of the swinging 60s, you get a movie that looks at its non-committal "live for the moment" hedonistic experimentation and blasts its moral character with a cannon.

    This just doesn't happen in movies - compare say, "If" or "O Lucky Man" or say, "Network" (to name three I like), and you'll see the targets as the familiar powers that be - from school to television. But Julie Christie's character is what people thought was new and wonderful - and its superficiality is blown to bits.

    It's as if a movie now were to look at a poor black woman raising a child alone - and blast her for any behavior that contributed to this state. It just won't be done - the sympathies are all running FOR that character. So were the sympathies for the Julie Christie character in that time - and the movie is very very brave in running so utterly against the current.

    I just love the movie - it's a step up from Schlesinger's earlier ones -the script is superb, the performances are excellent without exception. (Lawrence Harvey is particularly good - but of course it's Christie's movie).

    Do see it. It's also full of wonderfully imaginative touches - such as the ending scene.
    8mukava991

    window into a sliver of social history

    Darling is known generally as an iconic "Sixties" movie. It is at once a product of its time and a still-born anachronism. Though conceived and shot in 1964-65, there is nary a hint of the Beatles and their ilk, who by the time this film went in front of the cameras were unquestionably the major pop cultural phenomenon on earth, and certainly in Britain where this story takes place. The characters who parade before us in this slickly packaged satire are far more evocative of the earlier "La Dolce Vita" period. Perhaps the newly emerging youthful counterculture is absent because the groupings visited here are, in contrast to the many- millioned teenage Beatles fans, older, more rarefied and further up the social ladder in corporate boardrooms, haute-couture industry gatherings, mainstream television production units, the profit-driven B-movie exploitation industry, and the haunts of continental royalty. Sparkling and memorable as it is, the musical scoring by John Dankworth was also dated by mid-1965 when this film came out.

    The satire is often from the finger-pointing, underscoring school. Best example: A portly dowager in furs at a charity function stuffs an hors d'oeuvre into her mouth with a bejeweled hand as a speaker pompously thanks those present for fighting the scourge of hunger in the world.

    Screenwriter Frederic Raphael and director John Schlesinger organize their material in semi- documentary fashion with voice-over narration by the title character, Diana Scott (Julie Christie) in order to reveal her hypocrisy as she describes various episodes in her life while the unfolding screen actions ironically contradict her words. She portrays herself verbally as innocent, sensible and basically decent when in fact she's selfish, dishonest and miserable. The underlying causes of her selfishness, dishonesty and misery are neither explained nor explored, but she is presented in a way that encourages us to regard her as a micro-consequence of the crass, materialistic, soulless macro-society around her. The episodes in her bumpy road to despair succeed one another briskly enough to keep us diverted and shaking our heads at the imperfect human types on display. The arc of the story takes Diana higher and higher on the material plane until she can rise no more, only to find emptiness at the top. The point seems to be "looks, money and prestige aren't everything – but look how entertainingly we're presenting that platitude."

    This film and Doctor Zhivago, released shortly after, made Julie Christie the most honored and publicized actress in the world for about a year and it's interesting to compare her Diana Scott with her Lara character in David Lean's epic. Lean, a stern and experienced taskmaster, got more solid acting out of her. Schlesinger's grip is looser, resulting in a more uninhibited but less disciplined performance. As one flavor of the media-created "It" girls of the Sixties (Ann Margret, Twiggy, Goldie Hawn being other flavors) she embodied a certain attitude toward life that was in the air in the industrialized world in those days, an informality of demeanor which some would call proletarian or others would call "beatnik"; hers was a looser, more naturalistic look, a beauty outside the parlor. Julie Christie was beautiful without a speck of makeup while the wind was blowing her hair in four different directions and seemed to be an entirely different person depending on which angle she presented to the camera or what kind of light was bouncing off her partly chiseled, partly soft and sensuous features. Her very presence lent a depth that may not have been written into the character. With another actress, one can only wonder how effective this film would have been. Her chief fellow players, Laurence Harvey and Dirk Bogarde, give splendid support, as does the rest of the cast. But the spotlight is definitely on Julie; it is her showcase.
    10littlemartinarocena

    Christie, Schlesinger and a milestone.

    "Darling", as it happens with most genuine works of art, it grows, it develops over the years and acquires a sort of clarity that, with the benefit of hindsight I will dare to call it, prophetic, as a social observation of its time. But what matters most is the film as a film. Brilliantly thought, written, directed, photographed and, of course, acted. Julie Christie became a symbol. She, clearly a very intelligent woman, surfed the waves of fame with an apparent detachment that I'm sure it's a sure sign of maturity and of a great respect for her profession and herself. If you think I love Julie Christie, you're right. But my love for her has to do with "Darling" and the age I was when I first saw it. The 60's were already in the past then but I saw them in the future, an immediate future.I can't imagine anyone, from any age, who loves film could be indifferent to this tale of isolation in a world moving fast towards an acceptable cult for celebrity. Not to be missed.
    7JuguAbraham

    Christie and the film's script are both stunning

    Julie Christie deserved her Oscar. So did the scriptwriters--"Should Popes be ancestors?" And no on-screen sex when the film is considerably about sex!

    When the lead character becomes a princess one is reminded of Princess Diana's own life. Both are Dianas. A very unusual, complex work from Schlesinger.

    I did not appreciate the film when I saw it in the Sixties; now I do. What a great year for Christie--this and "Dr Zhivago."

    The social commentary is hard hitting--young black boys serving snacks and drinks to perverted white adults, the facetious interest of the idle rich in feeding the hungry around the world as the rich gobble food they do not need to eat, of rich princes busy renovating their palace's washing closets.
    10jery-tillotson-1

    Darling Julie

    I had not seen this film since 1965 when I was a college student but remember how electrifying it was to see a young, charismatic Julie Christie at the beginning of her peak years. She's given some great scenes to show off her multi-faceted personality and she throws herself into the amoral model, Diana, who sleeps her way to the top. I can't imagine any other actress who could have done this without being repulsed by her naked greed and amorality. Christie had an inner radiance that makes her likable throughout this ground-setting import from London. England had become a hot movie center during this era, giving us such phenomenal movies like "Georgy Girl," "women in love," "Isadora," and many more. We can see this movie as a time machine which captures the raw energy of that era as our sexuality began to expand into new realms from the staid values of the past. This is a terrific movie to watch from time to time and watch an early phenomenon begin her golden career.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The "vox pop" TV interviews conducted by Dirk Bogarde's character with people in the street were all done with genuine members of the public, not actors, and were not scripted.
    • Goofs
      When Diana and Robert quarrel and he leaves the apartment they share together, a microphone is visible on the left of the scene.
    • Quotes

      Diana Scott: Taxi!

      Robert Gold: We're not taking a taxi.

      Diana Scott: Why not?

      Robert Gold: I don't take whores in taxis.

      Diana Scott: What do mean?

      Robert Gold: That's what you are isn't it? A little whore! Isn't it?

    • Alternate versions
      The original UK cinema version was cut by the the BBFC to remove shots of a man wearing a woman's corset and to heavily shorten a scene at a party in Paris where guests watch a couple making love on a hotel bed (the scene was edited to end the scene before the male partner appears). Video versions featured the same print though the cuts were later found and restored for the 2007 Optimum DVD release.
    • Connections
      Featured in Film Review: Julie Christie & John Schlesinger (1967)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 3, 1965 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Дорогая
    • Filming locations
      • Rome, Lazio, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Joseph Janni Production
      • Vic Films Productions
      • Appia Films Ltd.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • £400,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $25,444
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 8m(128 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White

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