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Fahrenheit 451

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Fahrenheit 451 - 1966 | 110mins | Drama, Sci-Fi | B&W

The Production Team

Director: François Truffaut.
Asst Director: Bryan Coates.
Producer: Lewis M. Allen.
Associate Producer: Michael Dalamar.
Script: Jean-Louis Richard and François Truffaut. (from a novel by Ray Bradbury.)
Cinematography: Nicolas Roeg.
Special Effects: Les Bowie.
Editing: Thom Noble.
Art Direction: Syd Cain.
Production Design: Syd Cain and Tony Walton.
Costume Design: Tony Walton.
Make-Up: Basil Newall.
Sound: Gordon K. McCallum, Bob McPhee and Norman Wanstall.
Music: Bernard Herrmann.

The Cast

Oskar Werner - Montag
Julie Christie - Linda/Clarisse
Cyril Cusack - The Captain
Anton Diffring - Fabian
Jeremy Spenser - Man with the Apple
Bee Duffell - Book Lady
Alex Scott - "The Life of Henry Brulard" (Book Person)
Michael Balfour - Machiavelli's "Prince" (Book Person)
Anna Palk - Jackie
Anne Bell - Doris
Caroline Hunt - Helen

Plot Synopsis

Francois Truffaut’s Fahrenheit 451 was made at Pinewood Studios in 1966 under a short-lived policy by Universal to bring European directors to British studios. Fahrenheit 451 was from Ray Bradbury's science-fiction novel about a world in the future which no longer permits books, and the struggle of an independent thinker to defeat the regime. Oskar Werner played a fireman (in this future period the firemen were employed in starting, not extinguishing, fires of books), who begins to read the works he is ordered to destroy. Betrayed by his wife, one of two roles played by Julie Christie, he is lured by another girl in her image to a different community, a primitive tribe of forest-dwellers, all of whom have chosen to commit a classic literary work to memory, so that it can be transmitted to future generations.

The film followed the usual Truffaut introversion, the close-up of a loner against an implacable society, the individual who seeks an alternative to the society in which he finds himself - a theme distinct in his work from his first feature, Les Quatre Cents Coups. Eschewing the methods usually employed in science-fiction films, with complex and far-fetched gadgetry and costumes, the world in this film looked disturbingly normal, although it was meant to be a long way into another age. The neat housing estates and modish clothes worn by Julie Christie are of our own time - it is the behaviour and the sterile attitudes of people that are alien, although they are really extensions or projections of contemporary attitudes.

Science fiction is essentially fable-like and this Bradbury story is an excellent example, though curiously, less spectacularly conceived in film terms than Bradbury’s original book.