Life at the Top
Life at the Top

Life at the Top (1965)

5.8 ? Dec 14, 1965 1h 57m

Overview

Successful businessman Joe Lampton is married to the wealthy Susan, has two children, and lives in the mill town of Warley in northern England. But his career seems to have plateaued, leaving him disillusioned. This feeling is only exacerbated when he discovers his wife's infidelity with local man Mark. So he takes up with attractive TV host Norah and moves with her to London, aiming to reignite the fire that drove him to the top.

Genres

Drama

Release Date

December 14, 1965

Rating

5.8 /10

Runtime

1h 57m

Official Trailer from YouTube

Laurence Harvey

Laurence Harvey

Joe Lampton

Jean Simmons

Jean Simmons

Susan Lampton

Honor Blackman

Honor Blackman

Norah Hauxley

Michael Craig

Michael Craig

Mark

Donald Wolfit

Donald Wolfit

Abe Brown

Robert Morley

Robert Morley

Tiffield

Margaret Johnston

Margaret Johnston

Sybil

Ambrosine Phillpotts

Ambrosine Phillpotts

Mrs. Margaret Brown

Allan Cuthbertson

Allan Cuthbertson

George Aisgill

Paul A. Martin

Harry

Frances Cosslett

Barbara

Ian Shand

Ralph Hethersett

George A. Cooper

George A. Cooper

Graffham

Nigel Davenport

Nigel Davenport

Mottram

Andrew Laurence

McLelland

Geoffrey Bayldon

Geoffrey Bayldon

Industrial Psychologist

Denis Quilley

Denis Quilley

Ben

David Oxley

David Oxley

Tim

David McKail

David McKail

Oscar

Paul Whitsun-Jones

Paul Whitsun-Jones

Keatley

CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

7.0/10

Sep 05, 2024

As sequels go, this isn't half bad. Aspirational, working-class lad "Joe" (Laurence Harvey) has managed to marry the boss's daughter "Susan" (Jean Simmons), has the semi detached trappings of middle class luxury but his life consists little of substance. His career is going nowhere fast and he is soon being tempted by the visiting television star "Norah" (Honor Blackman) as his wife embarks on an affair de coeur of her own with the rather unfortunately wooden Michael Craig ("Mark"). Has he the fortitude to go it alone; does he even really want to? The story isn't as potent as "Room at the Top" (1959) but both Harvey and Simmons as well as a strong series of cameos from the likes of Sir Donald Wolfit and Robert Morley still work well to convey many of the frustrations of a young man trying to escape the bonds of a class system and of a woman who has never had to want for anything, efficiently. It looks good. The photography is intense, almost intrusive at times, and the score from the accomplished Richard Addinsell adds much to the story and in many ways substitutes for a rather wordy and descriptive narrative. It's a good film, not a great one, and it is good to see Simmons remind us just how adaptable an actress she was.

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