Director Michael Radford's 1984 is grim, grey sarcophagus of a movie. Made between April and June in 1984, the film replicates in its production the period of time depicted in the novel (the action seems to occur in that time frame.) The movie is excruciatingly faithful to George Orwell's novel published in June of 1949. Big Brother says it is your duty to see this film, but you will suffer.
I have always found Orwell's novel 1984 highly unpleasant and a real trial to read. The novel is so humorless and unrelievedly depressing that it's actually left scars on my imagination. I recall with pain the scene in which some thug casually smashes Winston Smith's elbow, inducing horrible pain; Smith finds it particularly degrading to be writhing on the floor and screaming over an insult to his elbow. (The movie with its commitment to literal adaptation of the book reproduces this scene.) There's another moment at the end of the book in the Chestnut Cafe, a sort of junkyard for enemies of the regime who have been reduced to skeletal zombies, when Winston meets his former lover Julie. Julie earlier told Winston that she didn't like children, was afraid of childbirth, and didn't ever want to be pregnant. Winston notices that she's somewhat "thickened around the middle" (I'm approximating) -- apparently, this is due to the fact that she's been raped and impregnated and seems to have borne a child. There are some horrible suggestions made as to how she's been tortured by a regime that she now loves (as a result of brainwashing) far more than she ever loved Winston. Winston also stares at the telescreen on which Big Brother is shown and swoons with love for the autocrat. Orwell imagined 1984 to be a satire, but there's not a shred of comedy in the book (and movie) except ironies that are too dark to be funny. 1984 is one of the 20th centuries greatest novels and an abiding presence in our culture -- but, as far as I'm concerned, the book is too profoundly disheartening to be entertaining and here, unlike many other writings by Orwell, the author takes himself with brutish seriousness. The severity of the book carries over into the movie and makes some of it well-nigh unwatchable.
The film begins with a two minute "Hate Session" in which the lower ranking members of the Party shriek and howl at the great nemesis to Big Brother, the evil spy and reactionary Emmanuel Goldstein. Winston, whose job is erasing apparatchiks who have fallen out of favor from the historical record -- he covers their faces with the pictures of other party functionaries and throws all evidence of the erased figures into a "memory hole" where flames instantly flare to burn the proof into ashes. Winston who is secretly guilty of thought-crime (he has procured a notebook and writes subversive things in it) despises Julie for her compliance with the regime -- it's not that she does what she is ordered to do, but that she does so enthusiastically. Julie, wears the red sash of the anti-Sex league around her belly, and manages machines (some kind of AI) that writes porn for the proles. Everyone swills Victory gin. War is perpetual and sometimes buzz bombs shred parts of the gloomy, half wrecked city. There are painful flashbacks in which Winston sees his mother devoured by fat, black rats. In one flashback, he steals food from his dying little sister. When he returns to the squalid apartment after eating the chocolate bar, his mother and sister have simply vanished. A man named Charrington runs a second-hand store and sells Winston a bit of coral that is enclosed in a sort of snow-globe. Charrington has a furnished bedroom above the shop and, later, for four dollars a week rents the place to Winston and Julie for their romantic trysts. (The movie doesn't acknowledge that Winston is already married when he has the affair with Julie, a detail from the novel that is elided.) For some reason that is inexplicable to me, Julie, who seems a frisky damsel, passes Winston (played by John Hurt in an utterly morose and tediously sorrowful part) a "mash note." No sooner is the note handed to Winston than he and Julie are having sex in the country, writhing on the floor of a forest, near a vista of trees and bare hills that looks exactly like a screensaver on a computer -- a bit like the rolling Dublin, California hills famously used as an image of a restful green world on a million million monitors. (For some reason that I couldn't fathom, the screensaver shot, which re-occurs every ten minutes or so, is located behind the door to Room 101, the infamous torture chamber where victims are forced to confront whatever they most fear in all the world. Winston's love affair with Julie features a lot of nudity -- this is an intentional strategy to make the lovers look horribly vulnerable against the ruins of the shattered city, the thugs in black leather garments and the hovering helicopters. Richard Burton, who was dying when he performed in the movie, plays the part of the Grand Inquisitor and torturer, O'Brien. Briefly, O'Brien seems to treat Winston as his protegee, explaining that the bureaucrat isn't using Newspeak correctly and that he needs to master new words in the vocabulary. O'Brien insists that when the language is perfected (that is Newspeak), the revolution will have achieved its objectives. A few minutes later, goons arrest Julie and Winston, who are both naked, and beat them up. Winston is, then, tortured for about a half-hour, an episode that is hard to watch and that is singularly unpleasant. Winston is reduced to an emaciated figure who looks like a concentration camp inmate. The objective of the torture is torture; there's no purpose to it. The idea is to destroy Winston so thoroughly that he can believe that 2 + 2 = 5 or 3 or whatever the party says the sum should be. Winston is tortured with electric shots to the point that he doesn't know what the 2 + 2 sum is -- when he tries to avoid the crippling jolts of electricity by saying "five", he's accused of lying and the electrical charge is increased. This goes on and on. At one point, O'Brien says that Winston thinks he is upholding the dignity of man -- O'Brien, then, drags him to a mirror and shows him his reflection, a hideous, scabby, lice-infested scarecrow; then, he rips one of Winston's teeth from his gums -- starvation has made this an easy thing to do. This spectacle is followed by the infamous episode in Room 101 involving hungry rats. Winston screams that O'Brien should torture Julie with the rats and spare him. Finally, O'Brien is convinced that Winston loves Big Brother -- the whole exercise is without meaning or practical effect; the Party will require Winston to confess all manner of ridiculous crimes ("I went to prostitutes to intentionally infect myself with syphilis so I could spread the disease to party members") since the plan is to put a bullet through his brain at some point after his abject humiliation has been sufficiently shown to the world.
Clearly, the movie is about Stalin and Stalinism in the Soviet Union. Orwell's novel is bitter, a result of the dissolution of his early idealism that led him to fight for the Communists in the Spanish Civil War -- all his idealism was reduced to a mouthful of ashes when he saw that the Party was corrupt and rife with betrayal. This experience seems to have led to the book and, therefore, to the movie. The film's bitterness is pathological and the form of the movie is utterly consistent with its subject -- the picture is shot in color reduced to a grey, concrete-colored monochrome; the editing is quick, sometimes suggesting Soviet style montage and the movie is comprised of big hideous close-ups: everyone looks terrible in the sweaty close-ups that the movie features. Even Julie is decidedly plain and Richard Burton looks wan, chalky, and bloated, like someone who has spent too much time boozing in a wretched pub. During the movie's 110 minutes run time, I yearned for escape. In my imagination, the escape was Terry Gilliam's Brazil which is the same movie on the same subject but far more entertaining, it's surreal humor not blunted by all the misery and torture. Everyone should see 1984 --it's your duty. But cleanse your palate with the much more engaging if equally savage satire you will find in Gilliam's great Brazil.