| Index | 5 reviews in total |
8 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Back Where We Started, Here We Go 'Round Again, 27 March 2002
Author:
krasnegar (fairportfan@gmail.com) from Atlanta
The ambiguity of everything in this film is its hook and its
fascination.
The Traveller *may* be a serial rapist. He *may* be an incestuous child
abuser. He *may* be unemployed but pretending to still have a job. And so
on.
And Ray isn't telling; we have to decide for ourselves.
Ray Davies is, after all, the man who wrote "Lola" -- the song whose whole
meaning turns on the listener's interpretation of one of the most
ambiguous
sentences ever written in the English language.
Many of the songs from the film -- in
different arrangements -- are to be found on the Kinks' "Word of Mouth"
album. There is also a "Return" soundtrack album -- good luck finding a
copy.
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Kinky Horror, 9 December 2003
Author:
gavcrimson from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
SPOILERS INCLUDED
Return to Waterloo is an impressive, offbeat 60 minute feature made for
Channel 4 by Ray `The Kinks' Davies in 1984. A middle-aged commuter (Ken
Colley) known only as The Traveller' appears to suffer a mental breakdown
while on a train between Guildford and Waterloo. He begins to have
fantasies about his fellow passengers bursting into song a la Dennis Potter.
Fat Thatcherite businessmen try to seduce a fresh faced associate to their
way of thinking,singing claims of play the game and you'll be one of us'.
Elsewhere violent punks terrorise their fellow passengers by blasting out a
nihilist song called Sold Me Out' from their ghetto blaster and elderly WW2
veterans remark what has this great nation become' as the train passes a
graveyard.
Things become far more darker as the train ride progresses,The Traveller
begins imagining the punks beating the other passengers then dragging them
into the aisle ready to be shot in the head,a blind old granny has her dark
glasses pulled off revealing her white zombie-like eyes,she then produces a
huge knife and proceeds to stab her attacker to death,and the Traveller
imagines himself flying into a rage decapitating people on the train with
his briefcase,a scene in which his victims are represented by department
store mannequins.
All rather bizarre. Oh and of course there is also the small matter that
the Traveller may or may not be a rapist and serial killer. A copy of The
Sun which he brings on the train with him carries the headline Have you
seen this face?rapist sought' and the photo-fit on the cover looks allot
like the traveller. Something which doesn't go unnoticed by the other
commuters. Adding to the traveller's woes is the memory of his teenage
daughter who has run away from home. There is the creepy implication of
incest in flashbacks of him accidentally walking into her room while she's
naked and even the possibility of murder as-in another fantasy scene-we
later see her on a morgue table turning round to embrace him. Return to
Waterloo has a circular plot,beginning and ending with the traveller
stalking a blond woman he's followed from the train in the underground,on
his murderous way he's eyeballed by a busker (Davies himself, doing a
Hitchcock like cameo) who sings the film's haunting theme tune look at all
the people around me,same old faces joining the queue,for a return to
Waterloo'. Among the interesting supporting cast are a very young looking
Tim Roth (as the lead punk),Gretchen Franklin as a gossip giving the
traveller dirty looks; the film also features cameos from Weatherman Michael
Fish and Agony Aunt Claire Rayner as themselves. For its director Return to
Waterloo seems to have acted as an experimental break from his day job,at
the time the film was made The Kinks were back in the charts and the public
consciousness-due in no small part to MTV airplay of their Come Dancing
video. The band had been signed to the Arista label in the late 70's under
the condition that they would produce straightforward pop albums,the lead
singer's previous forays into eccentric concept albums like Preservation
Acts 1 and 2,Schoolboys in Disgrace and Soap Opera were clearly out of the
question in this environment. Judging by the end result it looks as if
Davies envisioned Return to Waterloo as a kind of concept album on film.
It's shot in the style of an ongoing series of pop videos and dialogue is
mostly eschewed in favour of Kinks songs especially written for the film
which act as a commentary on the narrative. Davies' song writing skills
more than making up for the almost complete lack of dialogue. Return to
Waterloo seems every bit as disillusioned with the times as the central
character,from the punks to the greedy businessmen the film holds them all
in contempt,the only character Return to Waterloo seems to have total
sympathy for is the traveller's wife who believes her husband is having an
affair and is the subject of the touching song Lonely Hearts' whose lyrics
are in the style of an agony aunt letter,which in case you were wondering is
where Claire Rayner enters into the proceedings.
Return to Waterloo caused a considerable rumpus within The Kinks,especially
agitated was Dave Davies who felt the solo project' was taking up to much
of brother Ray's time,when he should be focusing on The Kinks and making the
most of their new lease of life as an 1980's stadium rock band (Dave may
have had a point,the band stopped touring in order to complete the film's
soundtrack and their next album sold badly compared to their recent output).
The film itself wasn't free of interference either,Davies later claimed
that the film's backers were uneasy about the content,specifically they felt
The Traveller should be sympathetically depicted which may explain why the
film remains somewhat cryptic over whether he really is the Surrey rapist'.
There is the Soap Opera-like implication that the whole thing is the
delusion in the mind of a sad,unimportant little man dreaming he's a serial
killer (or in the case of Soap Opera a rock star) in order to escape his
suitably drab day-to-day existence. A few years later Davies would revisit
the story (a Return to Return to Waterloo,if you like) in his book Waterloo
Sunset which firmly paints The Traveller as the guilty party and includes
graphic details which would have been unthinkable for TV broadcast in the
mid-Eighties. Even in the slightly compromised film version however Return
to Waterloo disturbs far more than many British horror films of the
period,and amusinglyalthough surely unintentionally-the film shares the
concept of a bored train passenger drifting off into a series of wild
fantasies with Derek Ford's Diversions a.k.a. Sex Express. Well worth
searching out,Return to Waterloo remains shamefully neglected in its country
of origin,it's rarely been repeated by Channel 4,is hard to track down on
video and is only available on DVD in the US.
8 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
I think this film is fantastic, 26 March 1999
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Author:
Michael Dunham from London, England
This film very haunting, especially the songs, (which are not available on any Kinks album. The actors are brilliant, especially Tim Roth as the young punk, he takes on a very powerful role in the film. The script is good as well, it is sometimes scary, sometimes funny. Overall I think this film is fantastic.
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
An underrated masterpiece of the 80's, 27 April 2008
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Author:
purrshaped from United Kingdom
Ray Davies' Return To Waterloo should stand up in British culture at
least as high as The Who's Tommy and even Pink Floyd's The Wall.
The saying " the mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation" Has
always been specifically applied to the British middle classes, and
never more so that to Ken Colley's rendition of the Traveller,
continuing his daily pilgrimage to Waterloo, to his Estate Agent's Job
in the centre of London, despite his possible mental breakdown , or the
more disturbing realisation that he may ( or may not ) be the sought
after Surrey Rapist.
Like any Rock Opera, what makes this production is the quality of the
songs, from the kids at the platform mickying "ladder of success," to
the hauntingly beautiful ( and tearfullly sad ) "Have you seen this
face" Davies manages to keep many possibilities and happenstances open,
until you are unsure if what you are seeing from the Traveller is a
collection of morning train daydreams, the visions of a fast decaying
mind, or guilt aligning itself to reality and cognisance and the
necessary reparations.
Pete
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Will I reach my destination?, 3 April 2001
Author:
kryan-1 (kryan@hhnt.org) from London, England
A splendid musical drama which reflects on the fantasies and frustrations of suburban commuter Ken Colley. It's certainly a film which has to be watched several times but you don't have to be a Kinks fan to appreciate it, because the music narrates the story. We are left to wonder whether Ken Colley as the commuter is undergoing a nervous breakdown or whether he is immersed in fantasy. We get a picture of a man who's daughter has run away from home. He is cheating on his wife and someone who has lost his job but is pretending to still have one by sitting in Hyde Park all day and coming home at the regular time. Childhood dreams and aspirations of success when younger have not materialised and our commuter realises he is a faceless non entity who has reached the pinnacle of his career and escapes into fantasy to alleviate the mundaneness of existence.
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