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      The White Bus

      1967 46m Drama List
      Reviews 62% 250+ Ratings Audience Score A young woman (Patricia Healey) is removed from her suicidal London life and taken home to North England. Read More Read Less Watch on Fandango at Home Premiered Oct 17 Buy Now

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      The White Bus

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      Audience Reviews

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      Audience Member For some reason, this is now in rotation on the MGM HD channel. A woman (Patricia Healey) takes a trip on a city-run tour bus around Manchester. The whole thing is filled with surreal touches, but what really makes the movie is the cinematography of Miroslaw Ondricek, particularly when the film changes into color from black-and-white. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/20/23 Full Review eric b While a sharp little movie in its own right, this 45-minute short is most historically significant as a precursor to the classic "If...," which Lindsay Anderson directed the following year. The two films share some traits: the occasional jumps from black-and-white to color, Arthur Lowe portraying an older authority figure and, most importantly, a bleak cynicism about the status quo. The big difference is that "If..."'s Mick Travis turns to violent revolt in the end, while the unnamed female lead of "The White Bus" is just a passive observer. Indeed, the actress (Patricia Healey) only has two spoken lines, despite being almost continuously on camera. "The White Bus" is more a series of vignettes than a story. Healey enters the film as a bored secretary staying late, finishing up her work as a janitorial crew glumly cleans around her. In the first of many surreal moments, she briefly imagines herself hanging dead from the ceiling. From there, she makes her way to the train, temporarily encountering two curious characters: a man who's overly immersed in a soccer broadcast and, more memorably, a business-class patsy (similar to the derby-wearing boobs whom "Monty Python" often lampooned) who randomly latches onto her to deliver a babbling defense of his naive thoughts on women and class divisions. As she boards the train, she assures this total stranger "I'll write," leaving him behind to melodramatically proclaim his love and belt out a few lines from a song. Here, we realize this film will be a work of symbolism, and not some documentary-like portrait of a contemporary young woman. The girl climbs aboard a train car full of yet more soccer fans, and her erratic journey begins. There's a cut, and suddenly the whole group is absurdly waking from deep slumber. One man even slept in the overhead baggage compartment. How much time has passed? We don't know. She takes a short walk to catch a white bus with "SEE YOUR CITY" emblazoned on the side. It's a tour intended to show off the efficient prosperity of modern England. This is where the film gains three primary characters: a female guide, an older man dressed in "Lord Mayor" garb (Lowe) and a ceremonial mace-bearer. Presumably, the latter two serve as totemic representations of the establishment. The strange imagery continues throughout the film. The tour group (elderly, except for Healey) sees an industrial plant, a housing block, a park, a school for girls, a library, a museum, a civil-defense demonstration and more. Of particular interest is a brief stop at a theater production: the actor singing in German onstage is none other than Anthony Hopkins at the beginning of his career. He is shot from a distance, and is not even recognizable during his few seconds onscreen. Along the way, stuffy Lowe takes over most of the narration and, at one point, strays into a paranoid complaint about books which promote homosexuality. We are not meant to trust him. Anderson and screenwriter Shelagh Delaney obviously disdain this empty presentation of a grand society and its "progress." By the end of the film, Healey has left the tour -- her companions meet a much grimmer fate -- and seems to rediscover smaller pleasures such as an old woman affectionately shaving her husband, another woman practicing piano and a couple bantering as they close down their humble diner. There's also a quick appearance by Barry Evans, playing a womanizing lad not so different from his starring role in "Here We Go 'Round the Mulberry Bush" a year later. "The White Bus" is full of bizarre sights, and revealing them all would spoil the fun. Nothing is quite realistic -- even the characters' footsteps on the pavement seem oddly amplified. If you can find this rare film, don't miss it. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Audience Member Very cute short film. Kinda has a similar vibe to episode of Louie, or Portlandia. Dry, acute observations about people going about their lives. However a lot of the humor went over my head, because it had to do with topical 60's British stuff. But a good amount of the jokes you will pick up on. Watch it on Netflix Instant. It's short and beautiful. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/19/23 Full Review Audience Member Lindsay Anderson' White Bus is a surreal cynical look at the status quo. We follow a young woman who leaves her desk job and takes a white tour bus around Manchester. The film touches on economic, historical, and social issues. Anderson uses a lot of the same techniques in this film as she would in her later film "If.." like the use of color and black and white photography. The cinematography particularly, is gorgeous. Its a very interesting piece, but I think the sum is not equal to the parts. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/17/23 Full Review Audience Member A young woman's semi surealistic journsy accros London. Along the way she meets people and sees the sights. I'm not sure this was really a movie but I saw Anthony Hopkins name in the credits. I didn't see him and I was not interested enough to go back and look for him. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/26/23 Full Review Audience Member A good interesting and surreal look at manchester in 1967, sometimes I think Lindsay Anderson is basically saying screw you to all the other artists and critics...(I.e. the random black & white which starts here and is also found in if) Arthur Lowe is from Hatfield which is all the better and he places the Lancastrian industrialist with surreal speeches, which gives reasons to think about the dying manchester industry and what follows in the late 70s & 80s (I.e. joy division and the smiths). I liked watching the bit in this 1967 film were they are saying about people will grow to like Kersal Flats and then watching the 1990 demolition video... The sort of quick death of their futuristic dreams, which had taken all the industry and jobs with it... The office tedium and the aristocratic (bankers in bowler hats, as opposed to today's type..) London of the 1960s is also contrasted to manchester. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/10/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Critics Reviews

      View All (2) Critics Reviews
      Jas Keimig The Stranger (Seattle, WA) The bright colors, sweet songs, and '60s fashion of Red and Blue are enough to fall into. Feb 2, 2022 Full Review Penelope Houston The Spectator The film seems to me to lack the bite of the specific. Jul 11, 2018 Full Review Read all reviews

      Movie Info

      Synopsis A young woman (Patricia Healey) is removed from her suicidal London life and taken home to North England.
      Director
      Lindsay Anderson
      Screenwriter
      Lindsay Anderson, Shelagh Delaney
      Genre
      Drama
      Original Language
      English
      Rerelease Date (Theaters)
      Dec 21, 1979
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Sep 16, 2008
      Runtime
      46m
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