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Quintessentially British review – amiable overview of national quirks | Film

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Film-maker Frank Mannion has followed up his documentary on champagne with an amiable but frankly anodyne and uncritical study of what is supposed to be “quintessentially British” – by which he largely means posh English, because the Scots and the Welsh don’t get much of a look in.

The result is a ho-hum round of interviews, some with people outrageously flogging corporate branded merchandise, the filmic equivalent of an inflight magazine article about all the grandest places to go shopping or sightseeing in the UK – but also, weirdly, like the special interest segments from BBC TV’s old magazine programme, Nationwide. There are contributions from London’s grandest tailors, hatters, shoemakers and makers of sporting guns; there are interviews with footballers, taxi drivers, chefs and racing trainers. These are mainly white British but there are also interviews with south Asian, African-Caribbean and east Asian people. An elderly hereditary peer unselfconsciously talks about his perks and entitlements at the House of Lords, and Ian McKellen and Judi Dench talk about the importance of Shakespeare. There are people of all ages in this film, and yet watching it is like sucking a single Werther’s Original for an hour and a half. There is a place for an un-problematised look at the subject of Britishness, but this is exasperatingly bland.

Having said all of which, Mannion himself is a likable on-camera presence and I was relieved that he concludes by interviewing journalist and historian Max Hastings, who was the only person to even hint at the B-word (Brexit), and said that he was proud to be British, but wanted that kind of Britishness that was part of an “internationalist future” and wasn’t about “standing on the White Cliffs of Dover, giving two fingers to Johnny Foreigner”. Wise words.

Quintessentially British is released on 9 December in cinemas and on digital platforms.


Film-maker Frank Mannion has followed up his documentary on champagne with an amiable but frankly anodyne and uncritical study of what is supposed to be “quintessentially British” – by which he largely means posh English, because the Scots and the Welsh don’t get much of a look in.

The result is a ho-hum round of interviews, some with people outrageously flogging corporate branded merchandise, the filmic equivalent of an inflight magazine article about all the grandest places to go shopping or sightseeing in the UK – but also, weirdly, like the special interest segments from BBC TV’s old magazine programme, Nationwide. There are contributions from London’s grandest tailors, hatters, shoemakers and makers of sporting guns; there are interviews with footballers, taxi drivers, chefs and racing trainers. These are mainly white British but there are also interviews with south Asian, African-Caribbean and east Asian people. An elderly hereditary peer unselfconsciously talks about his perks and entitlements at the House of Lords, and Ian McKellen and Judi Dench talk about the importance of Shakespeare. There are people of all ages in this film, and yet watching it is like sucking a single Werther’s Original for an hour and a half. There is a place for an un-problematised look at the subject of Britishness, but this is exasperatingly bland.

Having said all of which, Mannion himself is a likable on-camera presence and I was relieved that he concludes by interviewing journalist and historian Max Hastings, who was the only person to even hint at the B-word (Brexit), and said that he was proud to be British, but wanted that kind of Britishness that was part of an “internationalist future” and wasn’t about “standing on the White Cliffs of Dover, giving two fingers to Johnny Foreigner”. Wise words.

Quintessentially British is released on 9 December in cinemas and on digital platforms.

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