Buster (film)

Buster is a 1988 British romantic crime comedy film based on events from the Great Train Robbery. It stars musician Phil Collins, Julie Walters, Larry Lamb and Sheila Hancock. The soundtrack featured two singles from Collins which topped the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart.

Buster
Directed byDavid Green
Produced byNorma Heyman
Written byColin Shindler
Starring
Music byAnne Dudley
CinematographyTony Imi
Edited byLesley Walker
Production
company
The Movie Group
Vestron Pictures
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • 23 November 1988 (1988-11-23)
Running time
102 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Box office$540,000 (US)[1]
£3,939,329 (UK)[2]

Plot

Buster Edwards (Phil Collins) is a petty criminal from the East End of 1963 London. His long-suffering wife June (Julie Walters) thinks of him as a lovable rogue.

The film opens with Buster walking along his local high street. He breaks into a shop to steal a suit, into which he then changes to attend a funeral.

Buster brings Harry (Michael Attwell), who has been used on other 'jobs' and has recently served 18 months in prison for his part in previous robberies, to discuss the next 'job' with the ring-leader Bruce Reynolds (Larry Lamb). Harry wants 'in' and becomes part of the firm who are planning to rob a Royal Mail train allegedly carrying up to £1 million in cash.

After a complex and successful heist, the gang return to their farmhouse hideout to stay out of sight and split the spoils. They find they have stolen over £3 million − much more than they have anticipated or reported by the media. Members of the gang are shown drinking from beer bottles and glasses without wearing gloves, thereby leaving fingerprints which would be evidence of their involvement in the robbery.

While lying low at the farmhouse they hear on the radio that the police are searching farmhouses and outhouses within a 30-mile (48 km) radius of the robbery site. The gang become nervous and some members want to immediately return to London for fear of discovery; others think they should keep to the original plan and stay put.

The gang decide to return to London, where they meet their 'contact', a solicitor's clerk who, as in the original plan, arranges for the farmhouse to be 'cleared and cleaned', thereby destroying any physical evidence linking the gang to the robbery. The contact states he will bring the plans forward from a few weeks to the next two to three days.

Bruce, Buster and Harry are not happy with any delay at all because they fear imminent discovery, so they set off back to the farmhouse in their own car, to do the job themselves. During the journey they hear on the car radio that the farmhouse hideout has been discovered, so they abandon their plans and return to London, hoping they will have time to escape with their families.

Buster returns home. He is devastated to find that June has had a miscarriage while he was committing the robbery. She cannot believe it when she learns of his involvement in what has been quickly dubbed "The Great Train Robbery".

For several months after the robbery, Buster and June remain in hiding with their young daughter Nicky (Ellie Beaven) until they are turned in to the police by a suspicious neighbour. Buster flees to Acapulco where he is met by fellow Great Train Robber, Bruce Reynolds, and his girlfriend Franny (Stephanie Lawrence), who are also on the run and living it up in the sun on the profits of the crime.

June and Nicky arrive, despite the disapproval of her mother (Sheila Hancock), and although Nicky seems to love her new life in the sun, June is immediately unimpressed with their new way of life and resolves to return to England, despite knowing that if Buster is to return with them he will be imprisoned (The real Buster Edwards plays a small cameo during the arrival in Acapulco. He is seen walking out of the airport with his girlfriend, played by Phil Collins’ wife, just before Buster, June, and Nicky).

Buster remains in Acapulco for some time after June leaves, until realising (while celebrating England's 1966 World Cup triumph) that having money and the sun means nothing if he doesn't have his family, so he returns to England to accept his punishment.

The film closes 12 years after Buster's release from jail, showing him seemingly content and running a flower stall near London's Waterloo Bridge.

Cast

Soundtrack

The soundtrack album includes three songs that were performed by Phil Collins. Two of them were released as singles, namely "A Groovy Kind of Love" and "Two Hearts", which reached #1 and #6 on the UK Singles Chart, respectively. Both songs were number one singles in the US.[3] Phil Collins also co-wrote "Loco in Acapulco", performed by the Four Tops for the soundtrack. "Two Hearts" received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Song, a Grammy Award for Best Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or Television and a Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song, tying with "Let the River Run" from Working Girl by Carly Simon, while the soundtrack album received a Brit Award for Soundtrack/Cast Recording.[4]

Filming locations

The opening sequence was filmed in Broadway Market, Hackney. The robbery scenes were filmed on the Great Central Railway, using British Rail Class 40, D306, as a stand-in for D326, the engine actually involved. Some scenes were filmed in Page Street, Westminster, London.

Royal controversy

Prince Charles and Princess Diana cancelled their attendance of the film's premiere on 15 September 1988, on the advice of Phil Collins, after the film was accused of glorifying crime. Collins said he wanted to avoid causing them "embarrassment".[5] One of the film's critics was Conservative MP Ivor Stanbrook, who said the royal couple should not be associated with a film that "commemorates a particularly sordid and vicious crime."[6]

Critical reception

Reviews for the film were mixed, with praise for the lead performances but criticism of the film's tone. Film critic Barry Norman, host of BBC Television's Film 88, praised the performances of Collins and Walters, but criticised the film's script for its tone of romanticising criminality, as well as the failure to address the brutal assault on the train driver, describing the film as "amoral and even deplorable in its neglect of the act of violence". Radio Times gives the film three stars out of five, stating: "Too squeaky clean to be believable, this is an entertaining but fairy-tale view of law-breaking."[7] Halliwell's Film Guide also described the film as an "uneasy combination of romantic comedy and chase thriller".[8] Leonard Maltin gave the film two-and-a-half stars, writing: "Singer Collins' starring film debut is a diverting (if forgettable) yarn, with Walters a good match as his loving, long-suffering spouse." Maltin also claimed the film had a "great soundtrack".[9]

Stage version

A stage production of Buster was staged between 2000 and 2004 at various locations across the UK starring (amongst others) Ray Quinn in the main cast. The production was an adaptation by Kieran Woodbury of the original Colin Shindler screenplay.

References

  1. "Buster". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  2. "Back to the Future: The Fall and Rise of the British Film Industry in the 1980s - An Information Briefing" (PDF). British Film Institute. 2005. p. 20.
  3. Dean, Maury (2003). Rock N' Roll Gold Rush. Algora. p. 160. ISBN 0-87586-207-1.
  4. "History". Brits.co.uk. 24 February 2016. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
  5. (9 September 1988). "Prince Charles cancels royal film date". Manila Standard (Manila).
  6. Dobbin, Ben (28 August 1988). "25 Years Later : Great Train Robbery: Lives Differ". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  7. "Buster". Radio Times. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  8. Halliwell, Leslie (1997). Halliwell's Film and Video Guide. ISBN 9780006388685.
  9. Maltin, Leonard (2014). Leonard Maltin's 2014 Movie Guide. ISBN 9780451418104.
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