Distant Voices, Still Lives
Distant Voices, Still Lives – 1988 | 85 mins | Drama | Colour
Plot Synopsis

Distant Voices, Still Lives is director Terence Davies’s semi-autobiographical look back at his working-class upbringing in post-war Liverpool. Told in flashback and divided into two parts, the film is a glimpse of a dysfunctional family and memories of a Catholic childhood in the 1940s. The story explores the abuse suffered by the mother (Freda Dowie) and her three children, daughters Eileen (Angela Walsh) and Maisie (Lorraine Ashbourne), and son Tony (Dean Williams) at the hands of tyrannical father (Pete Postlethwaite), who regularly beats his wife and daughter. The latter part of the film concentrates more on the adult lives of the three children after the death of their father, eventually they marry yet remain deeply affected by their childhood ordeals.
Production Team
Terence Davies: Director
Miki Van Zwanenberg: Art Direction
Patrick Duval: Cinematography
Monica Howe: Costume Design
William Diver: Editing
Lesley Rouvray: Makeup Department
Colin MacCabe: Producer
Jennifer Howarth: Producer
Jocelyn James: Production Design
Miki Van Zwanenberg: Production Design
Terence Davies: Script
Cast
Freda Dowie: Mother
Pete Postlethwaite: Father
Angela Walsh: Eileen
Dean Williams: Tony
Lorraine Ashbourne: Maisie
Debi Jones: Micki







