The Chain

The Chain

Your life in their vans.

7.0 / 1019841h 32m

Synopsis

Comedy featuring interweaving stories of seven households caught up in a property chain on moving day, each one dependent on the other.

Genre: Comedy, Drama

Status: Released

Director: Jack Gold

Website:

Main Cast

Warren Mitchell

Warren Mitchell

Bamber

Bernard Hill

Bernard Hill

Nick

Gary Waldhorn

Gary Waldhorn

Tornado

Tony Westrope

Paul

Leo McKern

Leo McKern

Thomas

Denis Lawson

Denis Lawson

Keith

David Troughton

David Troughton

Dudley

Phyllis Logan

Phyllis Logan

Alison

Nigel Hawthorne

Nigel Hawthorne

Mr Thorn

Anna Massey

Anna Massey

Betty

User Reviews

CinemaSerf

This is quite a cleverly interwoven series of scenarios following a series of people all moving house on the same day. We start at the bottom of the chain and work our way quickly and frequently quite pithily, through to the posh folks at the top of the chain - the ones who want to unscrew the light switches and remove the cemented-in garden furniture! They say moving house is amongst the most traumatic of events that befalls us (in peacetime, anyway) and Jack's Gold and Rosenthal have managed to assemble a solid cast of Brits to take us through their day of trauma and domestic nightmares via an avenue of prejudice, snobbery, kindness and plain mean spiritedness. Nigel Hawthorn takes the cake for me - the supercilious "Thorn" with long suffering wife "Betty" (Anna Massey) who insists on taking the ash from the fireplaces so he can fertilise his garden; but there are also engaging efforts from Maurice Denham, Billie Whitelaw with Bernard Hill and Warren Mitchell holding the narrative together nicely as one set of removals men. The humour is plentiful, but runs too much to stereotype for me. Very much of it's time - Mrs. Thatcher's Britain - it evokes a certain degree of disdain and nostalgia in almost equal measure, but it settles into a routine that becomes a tad predictable after a while. Still, it is an interesting concept that had it lost twenty minutes or so, could have been quite a pointed observation of human behaviour under varying degrees of pressure; self-imposed or otherwise.