Metro-Land (1973 film)

This article is about the 1973 BBC documentary by Sir John Betjeman. For the main article about the area served by the former Metropolitan Railway, see Metro-land.
Metro-land

Title card with the title "Metro-land with John Betjeman" in mock Edwardian script - yellow on a deep red background.

Title card of Metro-Land.
Produced by Edward Mirzoeff
Written by John Betjeman
Narrated by John Betjeman
Cinematography John McGlashan
Distributed by BBC One
Release dates
26 February 1973
Running time
50 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

Metro-Land is a BBC documentary film written and narrated by the then UK Poet Laureate Sir John Betjeman. It was directed by Edward Mirzoeff and first broadcast on 26 February 1973. The film celebrates suburban life in the area to the Northwest of London that grew up in the early 20th century around the Metropolitan Railway (later the Metropolitan line of the Underground).

"Metro-land" was the slogan coined by the railway for promotional purposes in about 1915 and used for about twenty years, until shortly after the incorporation of the Metropolitan into the railways division of the London Passenger Transport Board in 1933. As Betjeman himself put it at the beginning of Metro-land, it was a "Child of the First War, forgotten by the Second". Betjeman carries the pamphlet guide to Metro-land from the 1920s with him as he travels.

The film was critically acclaimed and is fondly remembered today. A DVD was released in 2006 to coincide with the centenary of Betjeman's birth.

The concept

According to Mirzoeff, the programme was conceived in 1971 over lunch with Betjeman at Wheeler's Restaurant in Soho.[1] The two had recently collaborated on a BBC series called Bird's-Eye View, which offered an aerial vision of Britain. Metro-Land was commissioned by Robin Scott, Controller of BBC Two, with the initial working title of "The Joys of Urban Living". As completed, it was a series of vignettes of life in the suburbs of Metro-land, drawn together by Betjeman’s commentary, partly in verse, whose text was published in 1978,[2] and interwoven with black-and-white film shot from a Metropolitan train in 1910. It was 49 minutes long.

Locations in Metro-land

Poster for DVD of Metro-land, Buckinghamshire Railway Centre, 2006

Betjeman's first appearance in Metro-land is over a pint of beer in a station buffet, reminiscent of a scene in the film Brief Encounter (1945). This sequence was filmed at Horsted Keynes, on the Bluebell Railway in Sussex. Other locations include:

End of the line: Quainton Road in the direction of Verney Junction, 2006

Critical acclaim

In general, Metro-land was warmly and favourably received. Miles Kington wrote to Mirzoeff that it was "just about the most satisfying TV programme, on all levels, that I've ever seen".[1] Clive James, writing in the Observer, dubbed it an "instant classic" and predicted accurately that “they’ll be repeating it until the millennium”. (In 2006 it was shown on BBC Four in the same week that the DVD was released, and most recently was shown on BBC Four again in January and June 2013, and in September 2014). Christopher Booker rated it as the best of Betjeman's television programmes ("Like others, I have been endlessly grateful … over the years for the more public activities of the 'outer' Betjeman"),[11] while Betjeman’s biographer A. N. Wilson recalled that it was "too good to be described simply as a ‘programme’".[12]

In a contemporaneous review for the London Evening Standard, Simon Jenkins launched into imitative verse: “For an hour he held enraptured/Pinner, Moor Park, Chorley Wood./’Well I’m blowed’ they said, ‘He likes us./Knew one day that someone should.”

Music soundtrack

"Tiger Rag" by the Temperance Seven plays over the opening title sequence, - a 33rpm vinyl disc at 45 rpm to provide 'a suitably manic sound',[13] - followed by "Build a Little Home" by Roy Fox. As Betjeman sits at a table in the Chiltern Court restaurant, built above Baker Street Station, "When the Daisy Opens her Eyes" by Albert Sandler plays. When Betjeman looks at 12 Langford Place, 'Agapemone', 'the abode of love', country house of the Anglican clergyman, The Reverend John Hugh Smyth-Pigott, The Witch of Endor and Le Roi David by Arthur Honegger are heard.[14] The Wembley sequence of the pleasure park footage uses the beginning and the end of the 1926 recording of "Masculine Women, Feminine Men" by the Savoy Havana Band (HMV B-5027). Other music - Elgar's Civic Fanfare (part of Wembley sequence), Walford Davies Solemn Melody (Interior:Basilica, Palace of Arts section), Harrow School Song, Sunny Side of the Street by Jack Hylton, Tit Willow - Gilbert and Sullivan (part of segment on Grim's Dyke in Harrow Weald), Golfing Love - Melville Gideon, Double Concerti - Handel, Crimond, Varsity Rag, Chattanooga Choo Choo - Len Rawle, and Everything I Own by Bread.[15]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Edward Mirzoeff, DVD viewing notes, 2006
  2. The Best of Betjeman, ed. John Guest. See also Betjeman's England (ed. Stephen Games, 2009).
  3. Anthony J Lambert (1999) Marylebone Station Centenary
  4. Betjeman's England (2009)
  5. Richard Ingrams (1971) The Life and Times of Private Eye 1961-1971
  6. The Times, 28 May 2011
  7. See note in Betjeman's England (2009)
  8. Mail on Sunday, 14 January 2007
  9. John Betjeman (1943) English Cities and Small Towns
  10. Richard's Photo Gallery - Shipton Lee
  11. Christopher Booker (1980) The Seventies
  12. Betjeman, 2006
  13. Edward Mirzoeff Notes to the 2006 DVD
  14. The Best of Betjeman, pp.215-236
  15. The Best of Betjeman, 221-235

External links