Adapted from Eliot George's (a pseudonym of Gillian Freeman) novel,
The Leather Boys is a bold and engaging drama set against the decadent
motorcycle clubs of 1960s England. Canadian Sidney J Furie's film
combines the sexual frankness and harsh realism of the British New
Wave and confronts themes of class and homoeroticism at a time when
being openly gay was still illegal.
Cosseted 16-year-old Dot (Rita Tushingham) and ton-up biker Reggie
(Colin Campbell) are a couple of high school sweethearts who marry
hastily and quickly learn about the follies and hardships of wedlock.
The teen marriage gets off to a rocky start when their Butlin’s
honeymoon is a washout and domestic life in London is no more rewarding.
When outgoing platinum blonde Dot spends her time at the cinema rather
than doing any housework and introverted Reggie loses interest in
sex their incompatibility becomes apparent - and they inevitably split.
Reggie moves in with his grieving grandmother (Gladys Henson) and
finds solace in the company of his irresponsible biker pal Pete (Dudley
Sutton), but comes to discover that even this carefree friendship
is not without its complications. Dot fakes a pregnancy in an attempt
to win her husband back and in a moment of madness vents her frustration
by cheating on her him. Reggie decides to get away from it all by
fleeing overseas with Pete to New York, but after a chance encounter
in a dockside pub he realizes that Pete is a homosexual – and
returns home.