Flame in the Streets

Emotional Dynamite!

5.9
19611h 33m

Flame in the Streets is a 1961 British drama film directed by Roy Ward Baker. Racial tensions manifest themselves at home, work and on the streets during Bonfire Night in the burgeoning West Indian community of early 1960s Britain. Trades union leader (Mills) fights for the rights of a black worker but struggles with the news that his own daughter is planning to marry a West Indian, much against his own logic and the prejudice of his wife.

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Cast

Photo of John Mills

John Mills

Jacko Palmer

Photo of Sylvia Syms

Sylvia Syms

Kathie Palmer

Photo of Brenda De Banzie

Brenda De Banzie

Nell Palmer

Photo of Earl Cameron

Earl Cameron

Gabriel Gomez

Photo of Johnny Sekka

Johnny Sekka

Peter Lincoln

Photo of Meredith Edwards

Meredith Edwards

Harry Mitchell

Photo of Ann Lynn

Ann Lynn

Judy Gomez

Photo of Wilfrid Brambell

Wilfrid Brambell

Mr. Palmer senior

Photo of Glyn Houston

Glyn Houston

Hugh Davies

Photo of Gretchen Franklin

Gretchen Franklin

Mrs. Bingham

Photo of Irvin Allen

Irvin Allen

Christie

Photo of Barbara Windsor

Barbara Windsor

Girlfriend

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

It wasn't just in the USA that racial tension was rife in the 1960s, it was also pretty toxic for many living in urban Britain too. That's exemplified here by the young "Peter" (Johnny Sekka) who works at a factory where there's a sort of truce between the colours that's striven for by union man "Jacko" (John Mills) who just happens to be the father of "Kathie" (Sylvia Syms) who just happens to be the girlfriend of "Peter". Small world, but not an happy one. Her mother "Nell" (Brenda de Banzie) is more openly hostile to this pairing but dad isn't a great fan either. It's so much because they are racist in themselves, but more that they have a concern for their daughter in a big city where mixed-race relationships were distinctly frowned upon and "half-caste" babies even more so. These aren't just paper-based threats, we can see from the stirring that goes on at their workplace that the young locals are just as keen on causing trouble; making their lives awkward and even dangerous. It's all building to a Guy Fawkes night bonfire that's likely to burn more than old wood from bomb-damaged buildings. There's some good and poignant writing underpinning this drama and the solid efforts of Mills, Syms, Sekka and Earl Cameron help condense quite a lot that's visceral into this tautly directed feature. It's de Banzie, though, who stands out for me. The conflicted mother whose not just concerned about her daughter, but also about the state of a marriage that she feels has systematically neglected her at the expense of her husband's union career and her family. That all comes to a boil too, leaving us with quite a lively and thought-provoking series of conclusions. It's violent at times, but ultimately Roy Ward Baker has let the words and the imagery do most of the heavy lifting here, and I thought it a potent piece of British cinema.

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