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  • 16 August 2019 is the 200th anniversary of the Peterloo massacre in Manchester.

    Peterloo begins after Napoleon's defeat in Waterloo in 1815. Joseph is a young shell shocked soldier who returns home to Manchester to no job and no prospects. The spoils of victory is only shared by the wealthy. The poor suffer increased prices due to the corn laws.

    Voting rights also belong to the rich and the powerful. The ordinary man wants the extension of the franchise and parliamentary reform, the wealthy resist. They also fear that a visit to Manchester from orator and reformer Henry Hunt (Rory Kinnear) will lead the rabble to riot. The local gentry and magistrates are intent on putting down any protest and have the army on standby. On the fateful day the army panics leading to the deaths of 18 people and many hundreds injured even though the protest was peaceful.

    Mike Leigh intended to make a working class epic that is still relevant today. There is humour, Hunt is a rich pompous dandy who himself is unable to connect to the ordinary man he likes to champion. However much of the film feels like a sermon with long lengthy speeches and ideals which repeat themselves. The landed, the military and the judges are painted as two dimensional baddies with only one possible exception. It also has a very strong Lancashire dialect, which some might find difficult to follow.

    Leigh does add intrigue. Radical agitators are watched by government spies. Letters are intercepted by the Home Office.

    Peterloo is an angry film to commemorate a terrible event. It is wonderfully shot but its running time needed to be drastically reduced and some of the speeches needed to be cut down. As for young Joseph, his fate was signposted.
  • Quite a long film, but it didn't drag. Tells the story well, but there are really no lead characters, and many of the characters are rather two-dimensional or even caricatures. Visually, it is excellent. I didn't know much about the Peterloo massacre before seeing the film. I now feel educated, and felt that it was two and a half hours well spent, although not a film without flaws. Stronger (more realistically human) characters could perhaps have made the film more engaging, but maybe telling the (hi)story was more important here.
  • Peterloo is the Best Mike Leigh picture I've seen. Yes it is too long & speech filled but the Manchester massacre of 1819 is horribly dramatic. You see how the forces of the status quo combine to send in the cavalry & yeomanry to charge at peaceful protestors, maiming hundreds and killing 15. The protestors wanted the right to vote, reform in Parliament (Manchester didn't have an MP) & lower food prices. The film is very well shot with an excellent performance as always from Maxime Peake. Oddly after a long build up to the massacre there is no focus on what happened afterwards.
  • A slow work up to the massacre. Incredible massacre scene. Would have like more on the aftermath as the film ended abruptly. Overlong I thought.
  • Make no mistake, the atmosphere of 'Peterloo (2018)' is simply stunning, with phenomenal set-design and costuming combining with expert acting and often impressively rural vistas to immerse you in Britain of 1819. The flick feels lacking in the narrative department, though, mainly when it comes to the attachment we have with its proceedings beyond a surface - and, in a way, historical - level. This is because there are a copious amount of characters who don't really have any character, aside from their political views and the way in which they voice them - often through verbose, long-winded and, frankly, sometimes dull (though also sometimes rousing) speeches. The players whom initially seem to be the focus, or become the focus for an extended period of time, tend to fall by the wayside for incredibly long stretches, too; they don't actually have all that much screen-time and often blend together or come out of nowhere mid-way through ( which is an issue perfectly encapsulated by the sheer number of cast members and the fact that they're often credited as a name followed by a descriptor, i.e. 'Tuke, The Painter'). This makes for an experience that lacks a driving force (indeed, I'd be hard-pressed to name the protagonist, even if I had to) and, thus, lacks a sense of story, a sense that this tale had to be told in film form as opposed to being written in a history book. There's also an absence of empathy with any of the people on screen, other than in their function as people (whom, in essence, really existed) that we will (or, rather, should) naturally sympathise with - especially when they suffer. In many ways, the experience seems to get lost within its self. It's clearly a political message, which is fine, but it tends to serve this function far more than it does retell a real-life tragedy in any real depth. It often appears to use its historical founding as a way to push its specific message - perhaps even massaging the truth to do so, though I don't know if this is the case or how accurate the feature is in general. In the process, though, it fails to provide proper nuance and also follows a strange structure simply so that its focal event, portrayed in a jarringly invigorating and appropriately frustrating final act, can be placed at the end of proceedings to mitigate the sense that it led on to anything other than death. This is a move which feels as though it is aching to draw blank parallels to today (as does the rest of the affair) but doesn't really do so, in a macro way, because we have the knowledge that the eponymous event, as unjust and vexing as it truly is, was arguably the first step in achieving the reform that the flick spends so much time talking about and, even if it wasn't, that that reform would still eventually come. It's not like the film is ever particularly boring, per se, just that it isn't as focused or as engaging as it could have been. The camera-work is usually restrained and the editing is sometimes straight-up bizarre, holding on shots of background characters as they watch others talk (whilst barely reacting) for minutes at a time. That's not to say I don't admire unconventional cutting, rather that the editing is often distracting and takes focus away from what you want to be looking at. This mainly occurs during the repetitive speeches, which are usually surprisingly watchable in spite of the way they're sometimes put together (perhaps in an attempt to vary them). They don't ultimately amount to much, though; they don't paint a picture of why the central incident occurred or serve to make us empathise with any of the characters. To be fair, for a two-and-a-half hour affair, the picture goes by pretty quickly. Despite that length, I wouldn't call it an 'epic', though. There's just an almost underwhelming feeling that nothing much has been achieved, that this story could've perhaps been better served. It's not bad, but it's not great. 6/10
  • Mike Leigh's historical epic Peterloo, details the events that led to Manchester's devastating 1819 Peterloo Massacre, which saw the British Tory government ordering a brutal military charge into a working-class crowd of peaceful pro-democracy protestors. It's a well directed historical film that talks about the events which happened 200 years ago - yet at the same time lashes out at present-day politics.

    This film is the result of hard work. Running for 154 minutes, dozens of characters and lots of conversations that all build up to its titular origin. Peterloo is an "experience". Let me clarify: the slow-march toward the awful event is so exciting, that by the way the battle is staged, it all feels so real and even more aggressive. These victims didn't see any of it coming and actions like this still happen up to this day. It's interesting to see a seemingly more arthouse film with a serious subject, get promoted as if it was a commercial blockbuster. That makes me ask the question, if they couldn't have turned it up a notch and make this into a blockbuster with more of a budget and still hold on to its script, to make everything even more epic and reach a wider audience.

    The opening sequence puts Joseph (David Moorst), a soldier son of a mill-workers family who's suffering from PTSD, in the spotlight. He's covered in dirt and blood in the middle of Waterloo, where Britain just victoriously won the battle. We follow him on his way home, wearing his military redcoat that's looking rougher by the minute. There's not really a protagonist in this story, we get to see different point of views throughout the film, though most screen time is reserved for Joseph's family. They basically stand for a community in the middle of revolution - infuriated by post-war poverty, Parliament's refusal to extend the vote to the working class and import restrictions. Joseph's father (Pearce Quigley) attends meetings with radicals, his mother Nellie (a magnificent Maxine Peake) remains her smug self, skeptical of change that will never happen anyway.

    We soon see another point of view, with spies delivering reports from these radical-meetings to the powerful rich, angry, white men in black robes who love to sanction everyone and everything that doesn't comply to their point of view on society. These magistrates appoint Sir John Byng (Alastair Mackenzie) as the Northern District commander because of his lack of political interest. These "gentlemen" conclude that upper-class orator Henry Hunt (Rory Kinnear) is their best chance to get some attention from higher-ups, but he is the one that plans a non-violent demonstration on St. Peter's Field in Manchester, for his democratic followers.

    Dick Pope channels 19th century paintings with his cinematography. Which is wonderful for some shots, but gets tiring when everything gets the same half-lit look. Performances by Peake and Kinnear are extraordinary and especially the latter stands out with multiple layers to his character, not afraid to take it to a next level of acting. Jon Gregory's exquisite editing skills, give us a clear look at the massacre, focusing on each victim and the violence that everybody had to endure.

    Peterloo's finale will outrage you and delivers on its buildup. This is still an arthouse film and the battle at St. Peter's Field misses the grandeur of other historic epos, but it concentrates on the characters we met and respects these storylines like only writer and director Mike Leigh could've done. Peterloo isn't perfect, but it is unexpected in every way and one stirring piece of filmmaking that you don't want to miss.
  • "Rise like Lions after slumber in unvanquishable number- Shake your chains to earth like dew Which in sleep had fallen on you- Ye are many-they are few." Shelley, from The Masque of Anarchy

    No contemporary director depicts and loves the working class better than Mike Leigh: look at Secrets and Lies for the best example. Believing that not enough people know about the massacre in 1819 in Manchester, where the British army slaughtered 18 and wounded scores of commoners peacefully assembling for liberty and rights, Leigh filmed Peterloo, the popular name for the uprising.

    With an ear for local locutions and pompous preening, Leigh alternates between the people and their monarchial rulers, showing the sincerity of the marchers and the fear of the magistrates, who wish for nothing more than a Waterloo to stem the French-revolution-like yearnings of the folk. When administrators order the soldiers to squash the gathering, it's the beginning of responsible press reporting the malignity of entrenched rulers.

    Leigh's longtime cinematographer, Dick Pope, has exceptional shots of the laborers and their homes to rival the best work of Millet and Courbet. The framing arches and rolling fields provide Pope with contours and colors to complement the dignity and vitality of the people.

    However, it's Leigh's unfailing ear for diction and eye for metaphor that distinguish him as a David Lean of the working class. Contrasting the magistrates clustered around drafting the warrants for the crowd and the almost lyrical happiness of the assembly not only sets up the worlds of sad and happy, but they also heighten the terror as the innocent are vanquished by the proud.

    Out of this debacle came a strong press that began and never stopped evaluating the ruling class. All hail the emergence of the Manchester Guardian.

    "Let a great Assembly be Of the fearless and the free On some spot of English ground Where the plains stretch wide around." Shelley
  • kevin c24 March 2019
    Movie night with Iris.

    Leigh's film is a long haul, and then doesn't really deliver the pay-off. I had no immediacy or sense of anger at the finale.

    As a bookend the Waterloo beginning is really useful. But then at the end, you're not told how many died, how it influenced the formation of the Guardian etc.
  • This is the first review I've ever done, but was moved to do so by some reviews that I have read on here since watching the film. So apologies to you experts, but here's my tuppenceworth. On the down side, a bit overlong, could have been a bit less wordy and faster paced. But, I left the cinema with the same feeling that I did in the early 70s after seeing Soldier Blue: stunned by the brutality of "the authorities" over the disenfranchised. Forensic in its drama/documentry approach and absolutely true to events (I have since checked various historical sources). This is what happens when people feel they lack a voice and does resonate with today's UK. I thought the lighting was superb and the epic, grand scale setting rare in a UK film. A must watch for teenagers who will not have heard of this event in history at school.
  • As with most movies today, the extremes are over-represented and the underlying issues barely addressed. England was reeling from a Napoleanic, banker-funded war, ending in oppressive debt for the major powers of Europe. The Bank of England and the Bank of France were both formed to lend money to their respective governments, with few constraints on the pyramiding, in order to fund regular wars. The French revolution was trying to spread its socialist conclusions. Men are represented as either cruel, money-grubbing wealthy industrialists or poor, woe-is-me peasant labor, although one could hardly call people who had several sets of clothes, a house and sets of dishes as poor. The gratuitous men-oppress-their-more-intelligent-women folk is consistent with modern social justice bleatings. Consequently, what we see is the plight of what the French called the bourgeoisie, or the merchant and skilled labor class. The entrenched oligarchies were hanging on to their power, generated by industrial technological expansions (in this case the mechanical loom), which ironically needed skilled laborers and supporting merchants, who also were gaining wealth, counter to the woe-is-me picture. Much of the problem was the government-imposed lack of producers' and laborers' ability to negotiate the price of their labor and the markets for their products. The many government-oligopoly controls on cloth production are not presented, but were responsible for most of the tension. Of course, these issues would hardly sell to uninformed viewers.

    As with the onset of the French revolution, the key issue is never quite resolved in these movies, or in the social justice bleatings of today: after the dust settles, who will be in charge and what will the new rules be? Will the current oppressors be replaced by worse oppressors? Meet the new boss, same as the old boss, both in labor and management. Government meddling has and will cause tragedy.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    PETERLOO is Mike Leigh's history text transformed into an overlong movie. It's an exploration of just what happened during the infamous Peterloo Massacre in Manchester, looking at the main players involved on both sides and the situation that allowed for the violence to arise. It's handsomely mounted, well-costumed and amusingly acted throughout (I love the regional accents), but it's also rather dry and dusty for the first couple of hours; this just consists of speeches and long conversations which become a little staid before long. However, the massacre itself is very well handled and powerfully done, so worth the wait. The excision of 30-40 minutes would have improved things a great deal.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The Peterloo massacre of 1819 is not a piece of history that is as well known as it should be. So director Mike Leigh sets out here to do a movie that will educate people on the subject. The story of how a peaceful protest for the rights of the people was brutally suppressed when the authorities, who were terrified of the prospect of Britain having a revolution just like France had, overracted.

    In the days when the story took place, not all men could vote. No women could. There were food shortages. The corn laws were causing problems. And people laboured for long long shifts in the mills for a pittance in wages. This was a long time before workplace health and safety as well, although it doesn't actually touch on that as much as you might have expected.

    Manchester didn't have a police force. Or an MP. King George the third was unwell. And the prince regent was regularly embarrassing himself.

    People could be sent to Australia for what we would now call a petty crime. Or hung.

    There were those who wanted change, and they were called reformers. It was the efforts of some to get change that led to the meeting being arranged in the first place.

    It's a long film, this, but that's because it takes it's time in explaining all of this. And since the director's aim was to educate and fill in knowledge gaps around this, that's fine. It is quite clever how it gets in details of the corn laws and habeas corpus. And let's be honest, if you asked a random sampling of people these days what the latter is, you might not find many who know.

    It shows the magistrates and politicans, who are terrified of change. It shows the Prince Regent. In a very accurate depiction. And the ordinary working class folk. It's grim up north might be a stereotype, so it doesn't hurt to be remind what was fact at the time.

    There's a lot of speakers. And speech making. And a fair few characters, who do drift in and out. But steadily, you get used to them. And the whole thing builds a momentum, so when it gets to the point where the protest is beginning, it becomes a hard watch as you know what is going to happen.

    None of which will prepare for you the actual massacre, a superbly directed scene that will stay with you for a while.

    It ends as best it can after, and the last scene was probably the right way to do such.

    The great thing about this is that it does make you think. About rights and things that we do tend to take for granted these days. it will make you want to learn more as well. I was straight onto Wikipedia after to find out more about Henry Hunt.

    But it's not hard to follow. So long as you're prepared to use your brain and concentrate. So if you are prepared to give this a chance, you will be well rewarded.
  • A film of poor caricatures, silly dialogue, and some very poor performances. I have only scored it a 6 as it is an honest attempt to tell the tragic story of Peterloo and bring it the attention of a general population who continue to live under the yoke of tyranny disguised as democracy. If I were to single out one rotten performance it would be Maxine Peake who is completely out of character and range. A close second is Roy Kinnear as Orator Hunt. Perhaps they are let down by a very corny script. I was very disappointed when I first watched this and have just watched it again and have formed an even poorer opinion. In many ways there is an episode of Sharpe that tells a fictionalised version that is more succinct and far more poignant. The events at St Petersfield were a stain on Britain yet the lessons have not been learned to this day, and I guess that is what Mike Leigh wanted people to see. I just wish he could have done it in a film with a better script and better actors.
  • The Peterloo Massacre is an overlooked important moment in social and political history, this film is a frustrating/boring let down. There is no narrative thread, the film lurches from one set piece over blown interminable speech to another and the acting of some characters is nigh on comedic. The insertion of a family to helpfully explain events and how downtrodden everyone is gives the film a BBC school program feel.
  • In place of his usual chamber dramas and comedies, filmmaker Mike Leigh invades cinematic territory generally dominated by the social-consciousness workof countryman Ken Loach with this strong depiction of a key historical moment in England 200 years back, the sort not taught in school where I grew up (Cleveland, Ohio).

    It has as much relevance today at that closer-to-home massacre at Kent State, showing in vivid detail the life and times of struggling to survive Manchester folk, assembling peaceably for a rally for universal suffrage and democratic representation. They are mowed down by the authorities, as Leigh shows us the awful tyranny and decadence of authoritarian types, hardly exaggerated when compared to the daily arrogance and misbehavior of our Pres. Trump.

    The visual style reminded me of the beauty of Peter Hall's "Akenfield", one of my favorite serious movies of the '70s, that I was privileged to see at the London Film Festival, and of course the message and militancy have often been indelibly presented by leftist Italian filmmakers, ranging from the Tavianis' "Allonsanfan" to Bertolucci's "1900". All of these date to the '70s, a period of ferment and innovation and cinema we could use today.

    Some brilliant acting among the distinctive faces chosen for the cast include as villains: Karl Johnson and David Bamber, or the forceful good guys ranging from orator Roy Kinnear to the solid as a rock mom Maxine Peake.

    One bit of irony, I'm sure not lost on Leigh himself, is the British film being funded by Amazon, clearly a corporation of disruption (akin to the movie's industrial revolution culprit of weaving machines), but a method of facilitating the show's wonderful production values.
  • The film appears to be largely historically accurate, at least to the accounts of the day and tackles the important and fairly forgotten topic of male suffrage. Which makes this a significant film, even if it falls short in certain areas. Limited artistic license has been taken, for instance the apparent 4 year walk home from Waterloo of a soldier, however I wish they had used a bit more. After two and a half hours I felt character development was criminally under done and lessened the effect of what is still a fairly harrowing final scene. Both working class and upper class characters feel stilted in places and flirt dangerously close to a caricature. With exception of Maxine Peake who's performance is excellent and went a long way to my particular engagement with the working class characters. There are a lot of characters who don't appear to fulfil their arcs and a slightly anti climatic end to some of the main protagonists, I guess that is the unfortunate reality when making a film on a historic event. The cinematography and costumes are high class and a faithful retelling of events means I expect this film to stand the test of time and really should be a must watch. Even if it isn't particularly entertaining, but then maybe it wasn't suppose to be.
  • Slow to start because it explains why the English of the early 19th century had well founded issues with the the current political system its corruption ....by the upper classes and gave me a real ..true insight into why england bent towards socialism in later years...with damn good reason.......i'm a an american but i can see why things went as they did ...we never had these issues ..well not nearly the class issues as bad... hell we have our own race issues to deal with.

    andrew
  • During the last decades the political film seems to be in decline and the few notable exceptions (if they can be labeled as political films) seem to search for heroes in the palaces of power. In such a context "Peterloo" comes as a surprise, and it doesn't disappoint.

    Except for their treatment of John Hobhouse (and maybe the participation of a Quacker preacher among the "black" flock), the makers of "Peterloo" have been accurate even in the slightest details. Henry Hunt, the magistrates, Oliver the Spy, even the banners are portrated with accuracy and care. There has been some criticism against the film, the claim that it is "two dimensional" in the typical Holywood kind of a clash between the "good" and "bad". Well, if one should accuse Mike Leigh for something, that should be for not protecting the viewer from historical reality, by portraying the facts in a more believable way. Regency England though, has not be called "Age of Despare" for nothing and Shelley didn't write "The Mask of Anarchy" out of his mind.

    We, the people of 21st century, cannot comprehend that such hypocrisy, inhumanity and cruelness ever existed, but it really did. In the first trial of the people who attended the meeting, the judge commented: "I believe you are a downright blackguard reformer. Some of you reformers ought to be hanged, and some of you are sure to be hanged - the rope is already round your necks."

    Do watch Peterloo, at least for the sake of History and Republic.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    In the aftermath of the British victory over Napoleon at Waterloo, large sections of the north of England are in severe financial hardship, made worse by government policy enforced by vested interests, and without any meaningful democtratic representation. At a mass meeting at Manchester armed militia are sent in to break up the non-existent riot, which they do by injuring and killing unarmed civilians including women and children.

    This historical drama is clearly a project of passion for writer / director Mike Leigh, and I must start by saying that the period detail is first rate, as are the performances. And the Peterloo massacre (named "Peterloo" by the press after Waterloo and because the meeting was at St Peter's Field) is very well recreated. But it's the last 10 minutes or so of a 154 minute movie.

    What happens befor that is political meeting after political meeting, in which various speakers say the same thing over and over again. There is a little bit of would-be dissenters marching on the Moors, but then there's more meetings.

    This film is very worthy, and Leigh's passion and commitment shines out of every frame. But it's really, really boring, and stops dead after the massacre.
  • If I have a criticism of this film, it would be that it's half an hour too long. Mike can be a bit self indulgent, there where a few scenes that were just there for colour. Technically accomplished, well acted, and faithfully accurate to the history. If you like social history you will not be disappointed.
  • This isn't entertainment! how accurate historically it is Im not clear. However, the presentation makes it clear that the "prince regent" and "prime minister" of the day both consider the working class people of the scum of society. the prince regent is portrayed as a selfish moron with no intellect. the prime minister portrayed as a pompous fool. Those who died at Peterloo died for the COMMON Man, they were there to simply "peacefully" protest...no weapons, no form of defence and yet truly "great" soldiers (as described by the P M of the day) cut innocent working people to pieces.....the ODD thing about this film is that not one part of it takes place in "Manchester or Lancashire"....those of us who were born after this moment in our history do not seem to realise how privileged we are that others died to get what we have today....this film, Mr Leigh pulls no punches as to what society back then might well have been like
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is a long film. This can be forgiven for a film that has both historical significance and contemporary relevance. However, for this film the balance of the story is wrong: there is too much time on the context of the massacre, and not enough time on afterwards. What would I cut - some of the musical preparations. The audience does not need to see so much music practice on the moors. What would I add: more funerals, perhaps a sequence where they blend into each other, scenes showing what little effect the massacre had.

    In terms of acting and production values there is little to criticise, though some of the distant backdrops could be spotted.

    My overall feeling is that the story needs telling, but that this rendition risks losing a significant part of its audience, and thus the message.
  • Like most working-class Brits, I knew nothing of Peterloo (and I am from Manchester into the bargain).

    Mike Leigh has done an excellent job, documenting this momentous event in British history, an event conveniently airbrushed out of my secondary school education. Imagine that.

    A good 2.5 hrs long, it would make a decent 12 part Netflix drama. Though, he'd never get the funding for that.

    It is long, it is educational, it is historical, it is incredibly worthy. Watch it and draw parallels with the Britain of today. FPTP electoral system, zero-hours contracts, food banks, Brexit, et al.

    i gave it a 9.
  • I believe that most people today would have some sympathy for the demands of the Chartists who simply wanted the right to vote in a system that represented them.

    Ken Loach however is for better or worse a left wing polemicist and it is for that reason that many people disliked this movie. As someone who does not buy into that paradigm I saw the movie for what it was.

    The movie itself was stagey, preachy and so obsessed with showing the rich in the worst possible light that it became tedious. Having said that it was generally historically accurate so that was something.
  • A British historical drama; A story set in 1819 about a cavalry and yeomanry charge on a peaceful protest of 100,000 people at St Peter's Field in Manchester, England. An impassioned telling of an important event in English history with a narrative of extensive exposition, rhetoric and political discourse. As an account based on facts it is selective, based on individual incidents that do not fully convey the true depth and seriousness of the situation running through England in post-Waterloo Britain. By lampooning high power to the degree it does dullens the overall dramatic tone. The first act becomes sluggish and hardly recovers in the second. The final act is an arresting sequence of action and suspense. The director sets a suitably dour scene of the impoverished people but the twangyness of the accents and indulgence in mock-Northern expressions is often grating. Maxine Peake's over emphasis of the local dialect feels redundant at times. The story fails to deal with the aftermath of the massacre. All in all, the film holds a fascinating wealth of detail in the vivid period backdrop and the costumes and props lend a lot of authenticity. The cinematography is also very good, in particular the natural daylight and the candle light in the interior scenes is sumptuous.
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