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Young Winston

  • 1972
  • PG
  • 2h 4m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
Young Winston (1972)
Official Trailer
Play trailer3:11
1 Video
89 Photos
DocudramaPeriod DramaBiographyDramaWar

Complex family relationships, as well as a combat experience, form the personality of the future world-known politician.Complex family relationships, as well as a combat experience, form the personality of the future world-known politician.Complex family relationships, as well as a combat experience, form the personality of the future world-known politician.

  • Director
    • Richard Attenborough
  • Writers
    • Winston Churchill
    • Carl Foreman
  • Stars
    • Simon Ward
    • Robert Shaw
    • Peter Cellier
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    3.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Attenborough
    • Writers
      • Winston Churchill
      • Carl Foreman
    • Stars
      • Simon Ward
      • Robert Shaw
      • Peter Cellier
    • 46User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 3 Oscars
      • 3 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos1

    Young Winston
    Trailer 3:11
    Young Winston

    Photos89

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    Top cast82

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    Simon Ward
    Simon Ward
    • Young Winston…
    Robert Shaw
    Robert Shaw
    • Lord Randolph Churchill
    Peter Cellier
    Peter Cellier
    • Captain
    Ronald Hines
    Ronald Hines
    • Adjutant
    Dino Shafeek
    Dino Shafeek
    • Sikh Soldier
    John Mills
    John Mills
    • General Kitchener
    Anne Bancroft
    Anne Bancroft
    • Lady Randolph Churchill
    Russell Lewis
    • Winston (aged 7)
    Pat Heywood
    • Mrs. Everest
    Laurence Naismith
    Laurence Naismith
    • Lord Salisbury
    William Dexter
    • Arthur Balfour
    Basil Dignam
    Basil Dignam
    • Joseph Chamberlain
    Robert Hardy
    Robert Hardy
    • Prep School Headmaster
    John Stuart
    John Stuart
    • Speaker Peel
    Colin Blakely
    Colin Blakely
    • Butcher
    Noel Davis
    • Interviewer
    Michael Audreson
    • Winston (aged 13)
    Jack Hawkins
    Jack Hawkins
    • Mr. Welldon
    • Director
      • Richard Attenborough
    • Writers
      • Winston Churchill
      • Carl Foreman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    6.73.2K
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    Featured reviews

    10Tirogesflair

    A Film well remembered

    Like most reviewers here - I saw the film originally on the big screen back in 1972. As an eager young historian then - I recall how much this film helped bring to life Winston Churchill and political and social life of Great Britain in the decades before the First World War. Simon Ward was brilliant as the young Winston but Robert Shaw's tortured performance as Lord Randolph Churchill stand out - especially the scene where he is addressing the House of Commons when clearly his mind was fast gowing. Anthony Hopkins does have a small - but crucial role in the film as Liberal M.P David Lloyd George. It was his friendship with Churchill and the then political issue of tariffs v Free trade that led to Churchill leaving the Conservatives and becoming a Liberal for the next 20 years. I do also recall the final 'ghost' scene - so i will be interested to see what the new DVD will do about that as a missing scene from the earlier video release.
    6ma-cortes

    It's a good adaptation about Churchill's autobiography during his childhood and youth

    The picture is based on Winston Churchill's autobiographic book titled : ¨My early life : a roving commission¨ . The movie talks about infancy , the school times in a strict discipline , the young military and journalist career and the election as parliamentary at the early age twenty six years old . He intervened against the rebels in India , at defense of the British Empire . Winston participated in the last charge of Brit brigade in Sudan war along with general Kitchener (John Mills) in command the Army against Derviches that had formerly vanquished general Gordon (1884 , Khartoum, events narrated in the film with the same title with Charlton Heston). Later on , he was to South Africa as journalist in English-Boer war (1899-1902 , the leaders were Rhodes-Kruger respectively) that Kitchener would finish (though there he would create the first concentration camp) . Churchill is imprisoned but he breaks out from Pretoria . After the spectacular getaway which obtained world fame he was elected as Parliament member where he speaks an overlong speech that makes it a little bit boring . He subsequently becomes Tory (or Conservative) Party leader confronting Prime Minister Salisbury (Laurence Naismith) and later on , facing LLoyd George (Anthony Hopkins) , Liberal Party leader .

    The film won several Oscar nominations or Academy Awards , to original screenplay (Carl Foreman), Production design (Geoffrey Drake) and Costume (Anthony Mendleson) but achieve none . Simon Ward is enormous and Anne Bancroft , Robert Shaw and Anthony Hopkins are magnificent . This was the first of five films that Richard Attenborough and Anthony Hopkins worked together on . They later worked together on Magic (1978), A bridge too far (1977), Chaplin (1992), and Shadowlands (1993). Very good support cast , actors Ian Holm, John Mills, Jack Hawkins , Patrick Magee, Anthony Hopkins and Edward Woodward all received 'special appearance' credits and debut theatrical feature film of actor Nigel Hawthorne . The sensitive and romantic music score was masterfully composed by Alfred Ralston . The motion picture was well directed by Richard Attemborough .
    7mark-rojinsky

    Adventurous biopic from '71-72

    This epic biopic from '71-72 directed by Sir Richard Attenborough with a screenplay adapted by US writer Carl Foreman from Churchill's memoir My Early Life caught the zeitgeist of the early-'70s which were pioneering years - 1972 was that most downbeat of hippy years but many serious and intelligent films were released that year, including Pocket Money, Solaris, The Darwin Adventure, Antony & Cleopatra, Lady Caroline Lamb, The Master Touch etc. Young sandyhaired English actor, Simon Ward became an international star - he looks the part and his aristocratic bearing and Tory patrician style are spot on. The adventure scenes in the North-west Frontier, the Sudan and South Africa are thrilling - Ward shows great flair. The skirmish with the Derviches and the battle of Omdurman were filmed in the deserts of the High Atlas, Morocco in 1971, the scenes showing Churchill's hideout at a South African colliery were filmed at Morlais Colliery, Dyfed, Wales while the battle featuring a military train and Boer soldiers was filmed in Hampshire at Longmoor Military and Railway Camp also in that year. Vis-a-vis the coal-mine scene, ironically the winter of '71-72 featured the renowned UK Miners' Strike led by Yorkshireman Arthur Scargill head of the N.U.M. which occurred a few months before the release of this film.
    9artzau

    Jolly Good!

    This fine film of Richard Attenborough with Simon Ward really does have great legs, just like Ann Bancroft. What a great film with a splendid cast, John Mills, Robert Shaw, Patrick Magee, Tony Hopkins, Ian Holm and the great Jack Hawkins! I had not seen it since its release back in '72 and it was just as delightful seeing it tonight as it was back then.

    History buffs may take a few shots at the unevenness of the story line and the flash-backs-- especially, the interviews with Bancroft and Ward-- are a bit distracting but the writing, the script and the film all work together in the hands of a real master, Richard Attenborough. It helps to no end that Ward had the face of the young Winston Churchill and is able to subtly portray the young man burning with ambition. The supporting cast is superb. The events are gloriously Victorian and it leaves not a whit of doubt about the origins of the last of the old imperialists, Sir Winston. The final scenes with Ward giving the speech on the floor of Parliament are wonderful and suggestive of the great oratory that was characteristic of the old British Lion. A great picture of Sir Winnie's rhetoric was given in Harry S. Truman's notes on meeting with him at Potsdam who observed how "[he] spoke in sentences formed into well-formed paragraphs...a master orator." Young, proud, vain, arrogant, ambitious, full of himself and self concerned, and fiercely intolerant of opinions differing from his own,Sir Winston Churchill was indeed one of the controversial albeit great men of our last century. This fine film stands as a fitting tribute to him.
    7Steffi_P

    "The things that mattered"

    In the second half of the twentieth century the biographical epic came into its own. The past hundred years had thrown up a lot of inspirational figures in politics and war, and as that generation of heroes began to die off, and the big motion picture developed an intimate streak, high-budget biopics became a matter of course. And, like anything that is produced often, there soon becomes a standard way of doing it.

    The writer of Young Winston was Carl Foreman, of High Noon and Bridge on the River Kwai fame. He had a strong starting point – the writings of Churchill himself, full of the man's sense with words and subtle humour. Foreman structures the first book of Churchill's biography into a coherent and entertaining screenplay – sensibly opening with a burst of action from a period in Churchill's adulthood, which not only hooks the audience but also gives us a promise that this adventuresome time will be returned to later. This is especially important since there are moments in the first hour or so where Young Winston threatens to become a dry, domestic biography. But Foreman makes an error in his striving to get various supporting details across. There are several of these bizarre "interview" segments, where major characters are grilled by an unseen questioner, clunkily breaking up the flow of the story. The revelations in the interviews are important, but a writer of Foreman's calibre should have known better and woven them into the regular narrative.

    Foreman also produced, and he selected Richard Attenborough on the strength of his debut Oh! What a Lovely War. Attenborough seems perhaps a little overwhelmed by all the gadgetry of a larger production. His work looks pretty, but doesn't seem to have much point to it, especially the many slow zooms which become a little irritating. Still, there is his ability to create memorable and iconic imagery, both of actors and of landscapes. He also takes care to make the final shot of one scene dovetail somehow into the first shot of the next. For example a slow tilt upwards following Anne Bancroft on a staircase cuts to an opposing downward tilt to bring us in on the teenage Churchill's speech in the school hall. Such smooth linking devices are useful in a picture like this that has many sudden changes in place and tone.

    Attenborough was apparently also chosen for his ability to pick a decent cast. He pushed hard for Simon Ward in the title role, and on the whole made a good choice. The fresh-faced Ward deftly depicts Churchill's transition from eager teen to levelheaded military officer. However his adoption of the real Churchill's famous mannerisms and speech patterns in the final scenes verges on the ridiculous. Anne Bancroft gives a steady performance as his mother, although she is perhaps too good at playing cold-hearted women, and when her character's tenderness begins to sour towards the end of the picture it suddenly appears Lady Churchill is going to turn into Mrs Robinson. The finest turn is that of Robert Shaw as Winston's father. He makes Lord Churchill's descent into syphilis-induced dementia poignantly real – you can see the man he was in there still, disintegrating. There are also plenty of big name cameos, but frankly these are far too brief to be of any note or impact on the picture.

    So, altogether a mixed-bag of a life story. Everything we need to know is there, it just seems that on all accounts this was not a very cohesive effort, in which script, performances and general production have no particular aim or arc. As such, there are some great set pieces, and considered in bits most of Young Winston is very well done. As a whole however, it has neither the sweep nor the power to give us the impression of a life lived.

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    Period Drama
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    War

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Simon Ward was a predominantly unknown actor when he was cast as the central character of Sir Winston Churchill in this movie. Richard Attenborough threatened to quit the film if Carl Foreman (who didn't want Ward) didn't agree to his casting.
    • Goofs
      When the British artillery is laying waste to the Mahdist charge at Omdurman, several of the extras are obviously running in place so as not to accidentally be near where the explosives detonate.
    • Quotes

      Winston Churchill: I'm free! I'm free! I'm Winston Bloody Churchill and I'm free!

    • Connections
      Featured in Churchill: Renegade and Turncoat (1992)
    • Soundtracks
      Forty Years On
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

      Arranged by Alfred Ralston

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 21, 1972 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Afrikaans
    • Also known as
      • My Early Life
    • Filming locations
      • Longmoor military railway, Longmoor Military Camp, Hampshire, England, UK(train scenes)
    • Production company
      • Open Road Films (II)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $4,687,000
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 2h 4m(124 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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