I posted this over in an UBF thread. I figure we could also have a discussion here..
Some of those shots have striking parallels in BBM, in fact there are a few dead on.
** SPOILERS ON **
I agree with that scene where they ran into each other, the one you quoted. Powerful.
Times are approximate as I watched it in 2 parts from the Youtube links posted earlier.
8:15 in Flora is teaching a lesson to her class about Achilles and Patroclus. The class is having a discussion (and snicker) about the two Greeks when Flora casually explains their relationship as "love between heroes was regarded as surpassing the love within marriage..." Both Michael and Thomas served in the War as we are shown in the opening sequences. Contrast those words with her reaction(s) to finding Thomas's un-mailed letters to Michael. Add that to the angry, hateful words she spews at Michael about Thomas's painting after she confronts him. Now layer on her cold reaction to running into Thomas and that "good-bye" kiss Thomas motions as she and Michael leave on the bus where he essentially wishes her well. So did she ever grasp what she was teaching?
17:30 minutes in - there's the "you have no idea..." that gave goose-bump parallels to that same Jack and Ennis conversation.
00:41, 00:43+ - the whole exchange with Thomas' mother. When she opens the curtain and says "she's been storing " it's a direct parallel to Jack's mother telling Ennis to go upstairs and look about Jack's room. Then there are her lines around the painting(s), the eye contact about THE painting, "...but it is you, isn't it?" and then she tells Michael he must take it. That, I feel, parallels Ennis and Jack's mom's interaction at the end with the bag and shirt.
00:49 minutes in - when Micheal goes to see Thomas getting out of prison. Thomas looks around just hoping Micheal is there but their eyes never meet. Then Michael goes home and collapses going up the stairs. (OMG it was Ennis in the alley all over again) Then there was the shot in that same scene looking up at him thru the staircase runs, framing it like his own prision. Whew!
00:55 - 00:58 mins - When Thomas bumps into Michael and Flora and he connects with Michael one last time. Thomas blowing Flora the kiss admits defeat and he knows he will likely never see Michael again. In fact, I think that is the last time we see ever lay eyes on each other. In this same scene, Thomas gives Michael's son Patrick a gift. It's a box of pastel chalks... pay attention to that box.
1:17 mins in - The guys in the field, the camera work panning around them is like the scene with Jack and Ennis during their last meeting when Ennis collapses in Jack's arms.
1:49 mins in - those intertwined paintings after all those years - OMG - it kicked me damn hard right in the gut. Still gives me chills just thinking about it now and what Flora had to face in that instant.
1:56 mins in - that letter which we didn't know the fate of. Now here's another kicker. It is almost an exact book end in running time to its first appearance. When Flora gives her grandson Adam the single letter she saved which Michael NEVER sent to Thomas, she kept it in the "Pastel Colors" box Thomas had given Michael's son Robert at that last chance meeting. WOW. Nice detail.
Since the story is "loosely based" on Patrick Gale's father, it is unclear how much of what we see may be factual other than he was gay. But none-the-less, that does not detract from the story, the acting or the emotional conveyance. If there is a letter, what a treasure!
(This is a delta from the story... ) See
https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2017/jul/28/my-fathers-love-for-another-man-patrick-gale-man-in-an-orange-shirt** SPOILERS OFF ***
I'll keep replaying this in my head for a long time.
I also will do more reading about his real life.
This will be a permanent film for viewing.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/tv/2017/07/31/man-orange-shirt-heart-rending-account-gay-life-forties-britain/"...personified brilliantly the two poles of the dilemma gay men faced: to bow to social convention and die inwardly or live a true life and be pilloried for it. All of this made for a thoroughly engaging drama that did a terrific job of reminding us how damaging and repellent attitudes to homosexuality were in the not-so-distant past."
Here's another ->
https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2017/aug/01/man-in-an-orange-shirt-review-heartbreaking-happiness-denied"Much of the tension is between Michael’s inability to move beyond the life that is expected of him and Thomas’ inability, or unwillingness, to toe the line. Both positions are sympathetic. James McArdle’s Thomas is angry and defiant, beaten down and wounded by imprisonment and injustice. Oliver Jackson-Cohen is Michael, all Buzz Lightyear jawline and watery Jake Gyllenhaal eyes. It’s handy that he’s got such expressive peepers, as much of the emotion here is offered in a series of lingering looks shot across various gorgeously decorated period rooms that say, variously: “I’m in pain,” “I’m in agony,” or “Sorry about marrying you even though I’m deeply in love with my best friend.” "
One more -->
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/writersroom/entries/6a5ba29a-76c3-4a85-9af2-e8f77da7a96dV.