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The Hours and Times

The Hours and Times
Promotional release poster
Directed byChristopher Münch
Written byChristopher Münch
Produced byChristopher Münch
StarringDavid Angus
Ian Hart
CinematographyChristopher Münch
Edited byChristopher Münch
Distributed byGood Machine (US)
Release dates
  • September 7, 1991 (1991-09-07) (Canada)
  • January 1992 (1992-01) (U.S.)
Running time
60 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Hours and Times is a 1991 drama film written and directed by Christopher Münch. Starring David Angus and Ian Hart, it is a fictionalized account of what might have happened during a real holiday taken by John Lennon and The Beatles' manager Brian Epstein in 1963.

Plot

It is 1963 and John Lennon flies to Barcelona with The Beatles' manager Brian Epstein for a weekend of relaxation for John. On the flight over they meet air hostess Marianne. John flirts with her and gives her their hotel telephone number.

John asks Brian about gay sex and says that he thinks about it sometimes, but is put off by the thought that it would be painful. They play cards and Brian tells John he is surprised that he brought that up, that he feels awkward about it, that the situation between them is hopeless. John tells him that he finds Brian charming but does not want to have sex with him. He is angry at the thought that everyone they know thinks they are having a sexual relationship. He goes to bed and receives a telephone call from his wife, Cynthia. She says that she misses him, and John says that he misses their son, Julian.

John and Brian go to a gay bar and meet a Spanish man named Quinones. John invites him back to the hotel where the three of them have drinks. Quinones is gay but married. After some friendly conversation he leaves early. Brian is angry with John, calling Quinones a fascist, and saying that nothing matters because he cannot have the one thing he wants. He goes to bed and confides in Miguel, the hotel boy. He asks Miguel for oral sex but then says he is only joking. Later he talks to his mother on the telephone.

The pair look around Barcelona and John takes photographs of Brian. They discuss, among other things, John's relationship with Cynthia, which he does not like to talk to Brian about.

John has a bath and plays the harmonica. Brian enters and sits on the bath. John asks him to scrub his back with a flannel, which Brian starts doing. John starts kissing Brian, who quickly undresses and gets into the bath. They kiss a little more, then John abruptly gets out of the bath and leaves the room. Brian finds him smoking in bed. John says he is not angry but can not put into words what he is thinking. The telephone rings, it is Marianne. John tells her to come up. Brian is angry, saying that he is tired of making allowances for people. Marianne arrives and Brian leaves. Marianne asks John why Brian is upset, and they argue. She says that she can see they care about each other but she thinks John torments Brian. She has brought a new Little Richard record, which they dance to.

John asks Brian about his first time in Barcelona. Brian says he was sent there by his mother a couple of years previously following an incident where he had been robbed and blackmailed by a man he met for sex. Following the trial, Brian was forced to see a psychiatrist and his mother sent him to Spain. Two months later he met The Beatles. Brian tries to get John to promise to meet him in Barcelona in ten years, no matter what they are doing. John agrees to at least remember the arrangement.

Later, Brian lies awake in bed with John sleeping next to him. Brian remembers a time when he took John to his “special place”, the roof of his family's shop and told John how special the time they spent together was to him.

Later, Brian and John plan to go to a bull fight, and John hopes he will not be too squeamish for it.

Cast

Source[1]

  • David Angus as Brian Epstein
  • Ian Hart as John Lennon
  • Stephanie Pack as Marianne
  • Robin McDonald as Quiñones
  • Sergio Moreno as Miguel
  • Unity Grimwood as Epstein's Mother

Production

Director Christopher Münch originally saw The Hours and Times as a "DIY exercise", not expecting the film to secure any distribution.[2] He wrote the script over a few weeks in early 1988 and traveled to England to cast it that spring.[2]

The filming took about four days in Barcelona (the hotel scenes been shot at Avenida Palace Hotel) and a couple of days in London. Münch returned to California where he spent the next two years editing it. The movie was released in 1992 in the US (1991 in Canada), after premiering at Toronto, Berlin, Sundance and New Directors.[3]

Oscilloscope Labs re-released a restoration of the film in 2019,[4] which was screened in Sundance that year.[5]

Awards

The Hours and Times won the Special Jury Recognition award at the 1992 Sundance Film Festival.[6] It was also nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at the same festival.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Hours and Times (1992)". BFI. Archived from the original on October 24, 2017. Retrieved 2023-05-24.
  2. ^ a b Christopher Münch. The Hours and Times Featurette (DVD).
  3. ^ Münch, Christopher (March 1, 2019). "Filling in the Blanks". Talkhouse. Retrieved 2020-07-28.
  4. ^ "New Trailer for Restored Re-Release of Munch's 'The Hours and Times'". FirstShowing.net. Retrieved 2019-10-19.
  5. ^ "Digital Archive - The Hours and Times". Sundance Film Festival. Retrieved 2020-07-28.
  6. ^ "Sundance Special Jury Prize". Reel.com. 2008. Archived from the original on March 6, 2005. Retrieved 2008-08-08.
  7. ^ "Sundance Film Festival 1992 - Grand Jury Prize Nominees". FilmAffinity. Retrieved 2020-07-28.