I posted about this film Charlie Bubbles (1967) once before in a Hardly Baked series called "Odd Little Films" which only got to one post before sputtering out. The idea was that it was to be a celebration of the sort of movies that - while they may be minor or even not very good - linger in your memory. It might even be for just one or two scenes. They stay with you longer and more plangently than the sort of films that are well-made, obviously excellent, have a message or a point, etc etc. .
In this long-ago post, I lamented not being able to find online a particular clip from it that I had never forgotten and whose "naturalism" seemed very striking.
Albert Finney directed the film as well as playing the titular character: a Northern working-class best-selling novelist (probably modelled on Keith Waterhouse or Alan Sillitoe, someone like that). In the scene in question. Bubbles is gone back to his hometown (Manchester clearly, although I don't think it's ever said) to visit his young son and his ex-wife (played by Billie Whitelaw - wonderfully cross, tenderness glinting out through the sternness despite herself). He's left them comfortably off, so they live out in the countryside now - she's into keeping chickens and free range, organic stuff, making jams etc. She keeps a good table and, noticing that Bubbles is looking a bit sallow and under the weather, fixes up some hearty grub in the farmhouse kitchen. Finney munches away at this big bacon sandwich and there is a protracted stretch of chewing that goes on for about two whole minutes. Although his mouth is full he keeps taking big bites out of the sarny - it's a thick home-baked bread and he's masticating away, hamster-cheeked. The shot even follows through to him cleaning out his molars with his tongue for those clingy bits of granary crust and bacon rind.
Well, after that big build-up, now you can see this scene! At 1.04.17
From Angry Young Man to... Hungry Middle Aged Man
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