The Last of England (film)

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The Last of England
Directed by Derek Jarman
Produced by James Mackay & Don Boyd
Written by Derek Jarman
Narrated by Nigel Terry
Starring Tilda Swinton
Nigel Terry
Jonathan Phillips
Spencer Leigh
Spring - Mark Adley
Music by Simon Fisher Turner
Andy Gill
Mayo Thompson
Diamanda Galás
Barry Adamson
Cinematography Derek Jarman, Christopher Hughes, Richard Heslop, Cerith Wyn Evans
Editing by Derek Jarman, Peter Cartwright, Angus Cook
Release date(s) 1987
Running time 87 min.
Country Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Language English
Budget GBP£276,000
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

The Last of England is a (1987) British film directed by Derek Jarman.

It is a poetic, rather than realistic, depiction of what Jarman felt was the loss of traditional English culture in the 1980s. It is named after a painting by the Pre-Raphaelite artist Ford Madox Brown.

Jarman wrote a book to accompany the film, which deals more explicitly with the relationship he had with his father, who was a Lancaster bomber pilot in the Second World War. Jarman used the impact of his father's despair, depression and violence on his own artistic vision. The depression that his father suffered is attributed to the high number of fatalities that bomber crews experienced and the atrocities of carpet-bombing civilians. The film is also a means to explore his vision of the dissolution of traditional (pre-war) English life. (See his earlier film Jubilee to contextualize it with the 1977 punk movement of the time).

The book and to a lesser extent the film are very much in the tradition of Roland Barthes Camera Lucida, Susan Sontag's On Photography, Jeanette Winterson's 'Art Objects' and to a lesser extent John Berger's Ways of Seeing in that he has used the deeply familiar and personal as a vehicle for dialogue about art and contemporary culture.


Derek Jarman received the 1988 Teddy Award in Berlin for the film.


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