The Ploughman's Lunch

An age of deceit... A man of our times

4.8
19831h 47m

As the UK begins its military engagement in the Falklands, a BBC news journalist attempts to climb up from his working-class roots, at any cost, lying to those around him to get what he wants, only to discover that he is the recipient of a deception far more clever than his own.

Production

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Available For Free On

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Cast

Photo of Jonathan Pryce

Jonathan Pryce

James Penfield

Photo of Tim Curry

Tim Curry

Jeremy Hancock

Photo of Rosemary Harris

Rosemary Harris

Ann Barrington

Photo of Frank Finlay

Frank Finlay

Matthew Fox

Photo of Charlie Dore

Charlie Dore

Susan Barrington

Photo of Nat Jackley

Nat Jackley

Mr Penfield

Photo of Pearl Hackney

Pearl Hackney

Mrs Penfield

Photo of Christopher Fulford

Christopher Fulford

Young Journalist

Photo of Andy Rashleigh

Andy Rashleigh

Journalist

Photo of Anna Wing

Anna Wing

Woman at Poetry Reading

Photo of Ken Drury

Ken Drury

Young Man at Poetry Reading

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

With rumblings coming from the wires about some Argentine activity on the remote island of South Georgia and Margaret Thatcher’s first administration struggling to deal with the gloomy British economic outlook, jaded radio journalist “Penfield” (Jonathan Pryce) finds himself trying to stay motivated despite the fact that he hasn’t a penny to his name. In search of at least a degree of self-fulfilment, he decides to write a book all about the Franco-British invasion on the Suez Canal in 1956. He has an interest in the geo-political dynamics and history of those turbulent events, and so sets about lining up some interviewees to put some flesh on the bones and it’s whilst he is researching, he encounters the redoubtable “Ann” (Rosemary Harris) whose left wing political agenda chimes a little with his but more revealingly shows him up as a bit of an intellectual lightweight. Indeed, his lack of societal “evolution” is all too clearly demonstrated as he visits his poorly mother and his father, both traditional working class and proud parents, with whom he has but a tangential connection nowadays. To be honest, I found this all to be a little too pedestrian and introspective a tale of a man who probably started out as an idealist but who was complicit in letting the system grind him down into a supercilious cynic. Pryce delivers well enough but with so little by way of characterisation to work with it all rather drearily meanders along. Harris, on the other hand, has less to do but makes much more of her role as a women still tainted by life, but much more in control of what she thinks and what she wants. Of course there is some political commentary here, and a thinly veiled critique of all things Conservative and capitalist - either contemporary or during Suez when Eden was at the British helm, but that’s also rather undercooked and disappointingly predictable. All in all it comes across as a television movie in terms of the production, the score and the photography and though watchable enough as a comment on Britain at the time, isn’t really very memorable.

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