The National Health Blu-ray (Limited Edition | Indicator Series) (United Kingdom) (original) (raw)

Limited Edition | Indicator Series / Blu-ray + DVD / 3,000 copies Powerhouse Films | 1973 | 95 min | Rated BBFC: PG | Aug 28, 2017

| Overview | Blu-ray review | Screenshots | (20) | Packaging | User reviews | (2) | Region coding | News | Forum | | | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | --- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |

The National Health

(1973)

The National Health Blu-ray offers solid video and audio in this enjoyable Blu-ray release

A scattershot satire of the red tape and inconsistencies of England's National Health program, the film is set in the men's ward of an old, crumbling hospital.

For more about The National Health and the The National Health Blu-ray release, see the The National Health Blu-ray Review published by Jeffrey Kauffman on January 30, 2020 where this Blu-ray release scored 3.5 out of 5.

Director: Jack Gold
Writer: Peter Nichols
Starring: Lynn Redgrave

, Colin Blakely, Eleanor Bron, Donald Sinden, Jim Dale, Gillian Barge
Producers: Terry Glinwood, Ned Sherrin

» See full cast & crew

The National Health Blu-ray Review

Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman, January 30, 2020

William Goldman, a screenwriter who certainly knew his way around the "power structures" of show business courtesy of having written any number of significant films like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and All the President's Men (both of which earned Goldman Academy Awards), actually wrote about perceived power in productions in his deconstruction of one of the most calamitous years in Broadway history in Goldman's intriguing book The Season. One of the chapters in that book dealt with the power structure of a Broadway production, in this case a little remembered musical called Golden Rainbow, which was the only Great White Way pairing of easy listening singing couple Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorm�, and who together in Goldman's estimation held sway over the entire outing, for better or (in Goldman's estimation again) worse. Golden Rainbow was a musical version of the somewhat better remembered Frank Capra film which starred Frank Sinatra, A Hole in the Head, and I go into some details of Goldman's pretty scathing analysis of the so-called "star power" of Lawrence and Gorm� vis a vis their musical production in our A Hole in the Head Blu-ray review, but there's a kind of interesting example of power belonging to a screenwriter which had a somewhat happier ending. In 1971, venerable scenarist Paddy Chayevsky was given absolute control over a project which ultimately became The Hospital, certainly a rarity in the annals of the film business, where writers regularly see their work tweaked, revised and otherwise chewed up and spat out in versions that quite frequently resemble original versions only in passing. The Hospital was a rather bleak "comedy" which posited George C. Scott as an administrative physician at a decrepit supposed place of healing where the entrenched bureaucracy seemed willfully designed to keep people from being healed. Chayefsky ended up winning the Academy Award himself for his efforts, and The Hospital remains something of a cult favorite to this day. Two years after The Hospital debuted, those wily Brits were at it themselves with The National Health, a film whose title actually notably contains the sobriquet or Nurse Norton's Affair, a subtitle which hints at a structural artifice in the film whereby "real" events in a rundown English hospital are interrupted by scenes from a completely ridiculous supposed "soap opera" dealing with doctors and nurses, often in hyperbolic romantic interactions.

As pretty easily evidenced by not just The Hospital but a number of his other efforts, Paddy Chayefsky didn't suffer fools gladly and he was more than willing to completely skewer the inanities of everyday life (and/or death, in the case of The Hospital). In that regard, he would have made a more than fitting counterpart to The National Health's scribe Peter Nichols, whose play provided the source material for this film (Nichols also wrote the screenplay). Nichols also kind of interestingly presaged if only by a few years works by Dennis Potter like Pennies from Heaven or (perhaps more appropriately given its hospital setting) The Singing Detective, in terms of offering a structure with almost built in "meta" elements and which, in Nichols' original stage version anyway, had an almost "music hall" ambience.

In this instance the "song and dance" interstitials one might see in a Dennis Potter outing are replaced with that aforementioned soap opera, wherein all of the medical professionals seen in the "real life" sequences are reimagined as overly glossy, evidently extremely hormonal, characters who seem more intent on aspects of their personal lives than any actual patients (patients are in fact virtually nowhere to be found in the soap opera, just one of several kind of cheeky artifices which also include all of the characters speaking in kind of exaggerated "American" accents rather than their native clipped British ideolects). There's obviously a social critique aspect cutting both ways in this bifurcated presentation, as the "Hollywoodized" version of the hospital seen in the soap opera bears absolutely no resemblance to the real life one, this despite the obvious holdover of actors playing roles in each section.

Those actors are a wonderful lot, though, and provide a ton of color in what some Americans may feel is kind of hit or miss comedy (it's notable that The National Health flopped on Broadway). Among the great performers who show up in both sections are Lynn Redgrave, Jim Dale, Donald Sinden and Eleanor Bron. In the "real life" escapades at the hospital, there are additional characters played by such greats as Colin Blakely and Bob Hoskins. Those supposed real life moments clash intentionally with the overheated soap opera elements which may strike some as only slightly sillier than the average episode of Grey's Anatomy. Whether or not that "contrast and compare" approach delivers a cogent message may be questionable, but the premise is at least distinctive and provocative.

The National Health Blu-ray, Video Quality

3.5 of 5

The National Health is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of Powerhouse Films' Indicator imprint with an AVC encoded 1080p transfer in 1.75:1. Culled from the archives of Sony-Columbia, who according to some pretty brief and generic verbiage in the insert booklet contained in this release provided the "HD remaster" for this transfer, this presentation has a generally organic appearance but some variances in densities and grain structure. As can probably be made out in several of the screenshots accompanying this review, the palette is rather dowdy a lot of the time, something that would be expected in the "real life" hospital sequences, but which can also attend some of the supposedly more colorful soap opera elements as well. That said, the palette in terms of primaries (red in particular) does tend to pop better during the soap opera sequences. Some scenes, notably toward the beginning of the film, have an almost grayish undertone which tends to suck a little life out of the palette. Some of the brief outdoor material offers a substantially warmer and more vivid palette, as well as improved fine detail levels. Clarity and general detail levels tend to be better in the soap opera moments, perhaps at least partially by design, since so many close-ups are utilized. There are occasional signs of age related wear and tear, and a few passing issues like some minor lateral wobble during the Columbia masthead. My score is 3.75.

The National Health Blu-ray, Audio Quality

3.5 of 5

The National Health offers a decent sounding LPCM Mono track which frankly simply doesn't have much of a "wow" factor by design. There are a few florid moments like some quotes from Tchaikovsky during the soap opera segments, but otherwise this tends to be largely dialogue driven. That dialogue is rendered cleanly and clearly throughout, with fine fidelity but pretty limited dynamic range.

The National Health Blu-ray, Special Features and Extras

2.0 of 5

Additionally, there's a very nicely appointed and rather thick booklet that comes with this release, which includes cast and crew data, an essay by Laura Mayne, interviews with Jack Gold and Peter Nichols, a collection of reviews of both the stage and screen versions, some stills and technical information.

The National Health Blu-ray, Overall Score and Recommendation

3.5 of 5

My wife and I spent several weeks in England this past summer and we traveled quite a bit by train, where we were regaled by several natives about the "national health", with few British citizens expressing outright confidence in not necessarily the system itself, but its requisite funding by a government consumed by Brexit. Even without the exigencies of something like Brexit, The National Health makes a rather similarly barbed case to Chayefsky's The Hospital in terms of what bureaucracy can mean for patients. How that gritty aspect intersects with the soap opera elements in The National Health may generate some widely different reactions in various viewers, but fans of this really fun cast will probably be interested in checking this out. Technical merits are generally fine for those considering a purchase.

Forum Discussions

No related forum discussions for The National Health yet.

| | $20.78 -$1.711 hour ago $35.29 -$1.511 hour ago $14.96 -$8.692 hours ago $20.99 -$2.663 hours ago $17.49 -$24 hours ago $24.97 -$6.785 hours ago Show new deals » | | | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |

Trending Blu-ray Movies

1. Se7en 4K
2. Se7en 4K
3. Twisters 4K
4. Twister 4K
5. Trap 4K
6. No Country for Old Men 4K
7. The Wild Robot 4K
8. Joker: Folie � Deux 4K
9. North by Northwest 4K
10. Demolition Man 4K
11. Dune: Part Two 4K
12. A Nightmare on Elm Street 4K
13. The Sugarland Express 4K
14. The Departed 4K
15. Oppenheimer 4K

Trending in Theaters

1. Nosferatu
2. Wicked
3. Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl
4. Conclave
5. Sonic the Hedgehog 3
6. Heretic
7. A Complete Unknown
8. Red One
9. Gladiator II
10. Juror #2
11. Venom: The Last Dance
12. The Count of Monte Cristo
13. Flow
14. Anora
15. A Real Pain
16. The Damned
17. Emilia P�rez
18. The Order
19. Babygirl
20. Nightbitch
21. The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim
22. Blitz
23. Mufasa: The Lion King
24. Smile 2
25. Better Man
26. Y2K
27. Moana 2
28. The Brutalist
29. Werewolves
30. The Return
31. Kraven the Hunter
32. Weekend in Taipei
33. The Fire Inside
34. The End
35. The Room Next Door
36. Armor
37. Memoir of a Snail
38. The Six Triple Eight
39. Homestead
40. Maria
41. September 5
42. Elevation
43. Ghost Cat Anzu
44. Queer
45. The Last Showgirl
46. Get Away
47. Trailer Park Boys Presents: Standing on the Shoulders of Kitties - The Bubbles and the Sh*trockers Story
48. The Seed of the Sacred Fig
49. Soundtrack to a Coup d'Etat
1. Wicked 4K
2. Dune: Part Two 4K
3. Wicked
4. Oppenheimer 4K
5. Dune 4K
6. North by Northwest 4K
7. Kill Bill: Volume 1 4K
8. Kill Bill: Volume 2 4K
9. The Thing 4K
10. Akira 4K
» See more top sellers
1. Wicked 4K
2. Wicked
3. Kill Bill: Volume 1 4K
4. Kill Bill: Volume 2 4K
5. Akira 4K
6. The Substance 4K
7. Jackie Brown 4K
8. The Substance
9. The Cell 4K
10. Twin Peaks: From Z to A
» See more pre-orders
1. Dune: Part Two 4K $17.99, Save 47%
2. The Cell 4K $24.99, Save 50%
3. The Batman 4K $14.99, Save 56%
4. Deadpool & Wolverine 4K $25.99, Save 48%
5. Godzilla Minus One 4K $25.99, Save 48%
6. Jaws 4K $13.99, Save 53%
7. The Goonies 4K $15.59, Save 55%
8. Face/Off 4K $17.85, Save 55%
9. Scott Pilgrim vs. the World 4K $12.99, Save 48%
10. Horizon: An American Saga - Chapter... $25.82, Save 48%
» See more deals