π ’π π § π ¦π π π π ’ π π π π ‘π π £π π ’π π π π π π π ¨
ββπ £π π π π ₯π π π π π ‘ - ββπ £π π π π π π π π π ‘
Following the death from accidental asphyxiation of Ralph Gurney, 13th Earl of Gurney, Jack Gurney (OβToole) becomes the 14th Earl of Gurney. Jack is a paranoid schizophrenic who thinks he is Jesus Christ, and shocks his family and friends with his talk of returning to his inheritance the world to bring it love and charity, not to mention his penchant for breaking out into song and dance routines and sleeping upright on a cross.
Nearly 25 years ago β approximately the midway point between today and the filmβs original release - Ian Christie anticipated The Ruling Classβs elevation to cult classic in a 2001 essay that opened thus: βThe Ruling Class may not be recognized as a neglected masterpieceβat least, not yet.β Noting that βboth play and film appeared between the great Profumo-Keeler society sex scandal of 1963 β¦ and the mysterious disappearance of Lord Lucan in 1973 β¦ life, and indeed death, seemed to imitate art, even in its most caricatured form.β
The play could only have appeared in 1968, the pivotal moment the 60s dream began to curdle into violence, and anarchy seemed a palpable threat to the establishment, ready to push back with
all its might. βAllegory, fantasy, and phantasmagoriaβ are brought to the screen while βreinventing the great studio tradition of British β40s cinema, which produced such films as Leanβs Dickens adaptations and Powell and Pressburgerβs melodramas.β
Christie concluded, βThis will never be a film for purists, but its ripeness and excess, its alert self-parody and breadth of cultural reference, mark it out as one to be cherishedβand also appreciated, as an avatar of the renewed interest in high-voltage performance that runs through much distinctive cinema of the
'80s and '90s, from Russell and Gilliam to Greenaway and Jarman. Above all, itβs a great, disturbing black comedy, and deservedly now a cult classic.β [Criterion, 2001]
Starring Peter O'Toole, Alastair Sim & Arthur Lowe [Running time 2 hours 34 minutes + brief interval]
π½οΈ Doors open 5.30, for drinks, nibbles & classic cocktails.
π½οΈ Films start 6.30 with a brief introduction from the curators.
π½οΈ Entry is free with a yearly ticket, although we suggest a small donation of Β£5 per person to help keep the lights on. Yearly tickets can be purchased on the door (Β£7.50 adult / Β£6.00 concessions).
π½οΈ If you buy tickets and are subsequently unable to attend, please let us know as soon as possible so that we can give your seat(s) to someone else.
Event Venue
Stanhope Road, CT14 6AD Deal, United Kingdom, 34 Stanhope Road, Deal, CT14 6AD, United Kingdom
Tickets
Concerts, fests, parties, meetups - all the happenings, one place.







