Room at the Top

1958

Action / Drama / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Hermione Baddeley Photo
Hermione Baddeley as Elspeth
Laurence Harvey Photo
Laurence Harvey as Joe Lampton
Prunella Scales Photo
Prunella Scales as Council Office Worker
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
986.5 MB
1204*720
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 57 min
P/S 0 / 2
1.86 GB
1792*1072
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 57 min
P/S 0 / 6

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by MartinHafer9 / 10

an exceptional film

This movie is about a poor English man who wants to claw his way to the top in the business world. To do this, he insinuates himself to the boss' daughter, while at the same time having an affair with a married woman who is 10 years his senior! Despite his being a sleazebag, of sorts, he has genuine feelings for this older lady and wants to marry her. However, at the same time events around him conspire to prevent this--ultimately leading to tragedy.

The reason I liked this film so much is that despite Lawrence Harvey's character being a scheming jerk, he is not 100% despicable and you can understand a lot of his anger and desire to move up the social scale. Several times during the movie, he meets people who think they are better than him simply by virtue of their family background or position at the company. All these work together to produce a gritty, somewhat sleazy drama that seems plausible and definitely holds your attention.

Reviewed by bkoganbing9 / 10

What Price Success, What Price Class

Room At The Top filmed in 1959 takes place some ten years earlier in post war Great Britain as veteran Laurence Harvey takes it in his mind to rise from his lower class origins by any means possible. He's a devilishly attractive fellow and if that's what it takes to do it, than so be it. Not like it hasn't been done before on either side of the pond.

Harvey's got no family so to speak, his parents were killed in his small town when a German bomb hit their house. He's rootless now and has a crying need to belong somewhere.

The similarities in character to novelist John Braine's Joe Lampton and Theodore Dreiser's George Eastman are too obvious to overlook. However unlike Eastman, Lampton as played by Harvey is courting two very different kinds of women. Boss Donald Wolfit's daughter Heather Sears is a young and somewhat inexperienced young lady who's easy prey for Harvey. Wolfit and his wife Ambrosine Phillpotts see what's happening with their daughter, but can't ultimately do anything.

But while they're trying Harvey falls in with the unhappily married Simone Signoret. She's married to Allan Cuthbertson who's a cheating dog himself. She's got a lot of passion left in her and even though Harvey's ten years younger, she knows how to show him one real good time. Being French she has a different moral view of things than the folks of her adopted country and she thinks Harvey does as well. He does, but Harvey has his priorities.

Room At The Top was something that still couldn't be made in America because of the Code, but at least it was shown here. What Makes Sammy Run, a work by Budd Schulberg never had a big screen adaption and it had similar themes to Room At The Top, Still it got great critical acclaim and two Academy Awards and other nominations.

Simone Signoret got one of those Oscars, for Best Actress in 1959. It's a very subtle part she undertakes, in fact she's not the main character, Harvey is. Still when she's on the screen even Harvey's flashier character of Joe Lampton takes a back seat. Signoret is just fabulous as the older and still attractive woman, trapped in a loveless marriage will touch you dearly. She's one of the most beautiful and tragic figures ever done on screen.

Harvey was up for Best Actor, but he and the film itself were running in the year of Ben-Hur. He and the picture itself lost to Charlton Heston and the noble character he created on screen. Hermione Baddely who had a role similar to Thelma Ritter's in All About Eve was up for Best Supporting Actress, but she lost to Shelley Winters for The Diary Of Anne Frank.

Room At The Top with its brutally frank talk of sex mixed with ambition has become a classic and Joe Lampton became Laurence Harvey's signature role. Two sequels with Joe Lampton, Life At The Top and Man At the Top, were spawned from the original, the latter with Lampton played by Kenneth Haigh as Harvey had died by then. It's an enduring classic of the British, nay the English language cinema and should not be missed.

Reviewed by Leofwine_draca7 / 10

A fine kitchen sink drama

ROOM AT THE TOP is a fine slice of 1950s social realism and by far the best adaptation of the famous novel. It features Laurence Harvey in one of his most famous turns as a brash young accountant who falls in love with two women at the same time. The first is his boss's daughter, a perfect match if her parents weren't against it, and the second is a middle-aged Frenchwoman who offers him endless passion.

This film's strength lies in the depth of psychological insight as well as the characterisation. Instead of being long-winded, the plot moves at a cracking pace, building layer upon layer to create a fully-realised world. The cast is perfect, with Simone Signoret a total turn-around from the last film I saw her in (LES DIABOLIQUES) and Harvey himself outstandingly powerful. A fine supporting cast of British character actors help to add to the general milieu and make this unmissable entertainment.

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