‘Something Like the Truth’: Confronting the Honesty of Brutalism & Post-War Planning in The Offence (1973)

Jonathan Smith

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This article explores the 1973 thriller The Offence in relation to its representation and utilisation of post-war urban planning and modernist architecture, particularly brutalism and new towns. It considers the film to be a seminal intersection between British cinema and post-war modernism, building on and ultimately eclipsing Get Carter and A Clockwork Orange which have received much of the critical attention in this specialised discourse. While ostensibly a character study of troubled policeman Sergeant Johnson, played by Sean Connery, I argue that The Offence’s engagement with post-war urban planning and modernist spatiality is its defining feature. The film’s extensive location shooting in Bracknell, utilising modernist and brutalist spaces, offers a direct intervention into architectural and planning discourses of the period. The Offence’s bleak narrative within the context of a modernist new town reflects criticisms of such quintessentially post-war spaces as ‘subtopias’ to quote Ian Nairn’s polemical attacks in Outrage (1955). The architectural centrepiece of The Offence is the entirely purpose built set of the police station, where Sergeant Johnson interrogates suspected child molester Baxter. As an exemplary example of brutalist architecture the space conforms to Katherine Shonfield’s characterisation of brutalism as inherently honest, ‘dragging to the surface what we are in the habit of covering up’ (2000: 23). The film’s extensive use of brutalist locations then creates a unique intersection and tension between the architectural style’s demand for a raw, honest edifice and the narrative’s central investigation into the impossibility of finding an objective truth. The Offence is then due a necessary reappraisal as a radical ethical and aesthetic engagement with post-war planning and architecture within British cinema.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of British Cinema and Television
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 12 Nov 2021

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