Aaaaaw! Nobody got killed. No trains crashed. No-one complained to the viewer about their personal pain and how unfair it all was. Only silent hearts suffered.
Fellow member of the sap of the month club here, Atheist.
It gets me every time, especially at the end with the hand on the shoulder as he leaves (boo hoo).
I read only recently that the scene is particularly appreciated by other directors.
I think the fact that they got nowhere near the inevitable bed in that flat, made the scene so much more meaningful.
Watched it once. Shan't be doing so again. Quite honestly I don't know why it attracts so much acclaim. Just like foggy November day - grey, dark and miserable.
This is possibly David Lean's best film. The cinematography is quite terrific and the choice of locations masterful.
Beaconsfield has changed a lot since 1945 but many of the locations are identifiable: Boots is still there.
Carnforth Station is well worth a visit where there is a Brief Encounter-themed museum.
No sex, drugs, violence or foul language. However it was banned in Ireland!
"......I appear to have a little something in my eye...."
Steam trains and Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No. 2; could a film be any more perfect?
It runs on an almost permanent loop at Carnforth Railway Station in the Brief Encounter exhibition area.
Based on a half-hour play 'Still Life' by The Master.