Testament of Youth
- Director: James Kent
- Writer: Vera Brittain; Juliette Towhidi
- Producer: Rosie Alison; Celia Duval
CGiii Comment
The book and television series said nothing about the sexuality of Edward Brittain - although he did have 'difficulties' with women.
This film...merely hints...preserving a privacy - she did not read her beloved brother's letter.
Recent revelations - by Mark Bostridge - tell a completely different and compelling story. Edward Brittain, upon the army's discovery of his homosexuality, committed suicide...heroically. He charged the German frontline and got shot.
Here, Taron Egerton plays Brittain with a voracious charm - he is cheek-pinchingly adorable...contrasting well with his mightily moody sister.
The book is an epic voyage into grief, this film is an atmospheric snapshot of Vera Brittain's sadnesses and frustrations...and, her inestimable love for her brother, her lover, her family and friends.
It allows you to imagine the terror and pain - if you allow yourself to go there...your tears will run freely.
A beautiful, fraught piece of work.
Trailer...
The(ir) Blurb...
A British woman recalls coming of age during World War I - a story of young love, the futility of war, and how to make sense of the darkest times.
This British war drama is based on the World War I memoir of the same name written by Vera Brittain, a young woman who abandons her studies to become a war nurse after her brother, fiancé, and closest friends are sent to the front lines. Brittain’s brother, Edward, was killed in the line of duty in 1918, shortly after army censors read a letter he had written, which indicated he was gay and had been involved with men in his company. While his orientation only became public knowledge after his death, as researched by a Brittain family biographer, the film does hint at an affection between Edward and fellow officer Geoffrey. In one scene, Vera returns to Edward a letter from Geoffrey she found in his pocket that he says he keeps with him “when I need to hear his voice.” He reads her an excerpt, in which Geoffrey addressed Edward as a “dear friend” and says he knows the men would be reunited, “either in this world or the hereafter.”
Glad to see GLAAD included this fine film...many LGBT media outlets chose to ignore it.
Cast & Characters
Colin Morgan as Victor Richardson;
Anna Chancellor as Mrs. Leighton;
Miranda Richardson as Miss Lorimer;
Alexandra Roachas as Winifred Holtby;
Mary Roscoe as Mother;
Joanna Scanlan as Aunt Belle;
Daisy Waterstone as Clare Leighton;
Jonathan Bailey as Geoffrey Thurlow;
Henry Garrett as George Catlin;
Emily Watson as Mrs. Brittain;
Dominic West as Mr. Brittain;
Alicia Vikander as Vera Brittain;
Hayley Atwell as Hope;
Taron Egerton as Edward Brittain;
Kit Harington as Roland Leighton