Social realism in films is representative of real life, with all its difficulties. The stories and people portrayed are everyday characters, usually from working class backgrounds. Typically, films within the social realist canon are gritty, urban dramas about the struggle to survive the daily grind.
Social Realism in British films peaked during the 1960s when what is commonly referred to as the British New Wave emerged. The new wave directors such as Karel Reisz, Lindsay Anderson and Tony Richardson had made a number of documentaries before moving on to feature films, and many of these had been screened at the (historically important) National Film Theatre event christened 'Free Cinema' in the 1950s. Like the auteurs of the French New Wave, many of the British directors were knowledgeable critics as well, affiliated with Sequence magazine. This gave them ample opportunity to promote their agenda.
Free Cinema was described by Tony Richardson as “independent of commercial cinema, free to make intensely personal statements and free to champion the director's right to control the picture”. Documentaries such as O Dreamland (Anderson, 1956) about an English coastal resort and Momma Don't Allow (Reisz and Richardson, 1956) about a suburban jazz club put into practice these directors belief in “the freedom and importance of the everyday”.
The themes and people discovered in these documentaries were something that the directors went on to introduce to mainstream cinema. The Free Cinema films were made without inhibitions, and led to the social realist aesthetic of putting ordinary people with problems onto the big screen. It is for this reason that the term 'kitchen sink drama' was coined, to describe the hum drum lives of the masses, and 'angry young man' to describe the rebellious protagonists.
Amongst the many films that emerged during the new wave of social realism, there are dozens of stunning examples that continue being championed to this day. Look Back in Anger, A Taste Of Honey, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner, This Sporting Life, Billy Liar, Cathy Come Home, Up The Junction and Room At The Top, to name a few. Many of these films were based on books and plays, as the social realist aesthetic was alive in literature and theatre at the time. The movement also ushered in a new wave of actors who embodied social realism in their use of colloquialisms and accents. Actors such as Tom Courtenay, Rita Tushingham and Albert Finney held up a mirror to ordinary working class Brits.
The demise of the films of the New Wave was due to a number of factors such as the withdrawal of American funding and the meteoric rise of television dramas, which of course are fundamentally an art-form based on social realism. The new wave of British film-makers captured the zeitgeist of the period, and paved the way for directors such as Mike Leigh, Stephen Frears and Ken Loach who continue to make films that shape a very regional British film industry. Films such as Riff Raff, Naked, and My Beautiful Laundrette, although made 20 – 30 years later, embody the same values as were inherent in the films of the New Wave.
Although the British film industry has an illustrious past, including melodramas that rival the '40s Hollywood film noirs, it is the field of social realism that has provided the most prolonged form of cinematic entertainment. History demonstrates that genre fads come and go. The horror films popularized by Hammer studios in the late 50s and 60s, for example, and the costume dramas which go in and out of fashion. But social realism is more than just a genre, it is the dominant form of cinema in British film. Just as the classic Hollywood narrative dominates the American film industry regardless of genre, so social realism and political awareness permeate British cinema. This is as true today as it was half a century ago, with social realism evident in popular British films such as Trainspotting, Brassed Off, Nil By Mouth, My Name Is Joe, This Is England, Human Traffic and 24 Hour Party People.
Further reading which may be of interest:
Classic British Comedy from Ealing