Rita, Sue and Bob Too

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Rita, Sue and Bob Too
Theatrical release poster
Directed byAlan Clarke
Screenplay byAndrea Dunbar
Based onRita, Sue and Bob Too
by Andrea Dunbar
The Arbour
by Andrea Dunbar
Produced byOscar Lewenstein
Sanford Lieberson
Starring
CinematographyIvan Strasburg
Edited bySteve Singleton
Music byMichael Kamen
Production
companies
British Screen
Umbrella Entertainment
Distributed byChannel 4
Release date
29 May 1987
Running time
89 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget£993,000[1]

Rita, Sue and Bob Too is a 1987 British comedy-drama film directed by Alan Clarke, set in Bradford, West Yorkshire about two teenage schoolgirls who have a sexual affair with a married man.[2] It was adapted by Andrea Dunbar, based on two of her stage plays: Rita Sue and Bob Too (1982) and The Arbour (1980),[3] which was first performed at the Royal Court Theatre, London. The strapline of the film was "Thatcher's Britain with her knickers down."[3]

Plot[edit]

Rita and Sue are two teenage girls in their final year of school who live on a run down council estate in Bradford, West Yorkshire. To earn some money, they babysit for Bob and Michelle, a better-off couple who live in a detached house in a nicer part of town. When the couple return later, Michelle pays the girls and tells Bob to give them a lift home. Bob, however, drives them to an out of the way place and proposes to have sex with each of them in the back of his car. They nonchalantly agree, and he and the girls plan to make it a regular thing. By the time they are finished, it is 2:00 a.m.

Sue gets a part-time job at a local taxi firm, and meets Aslam, a Pakistani boy who drives for the firm. He and another driver make a bet on who can get her into bed first, but Sue rebuffs them. At school, Bob shows up at Rita and Sue's PE tennis class to take them for sex. Rita manages to get permission from the teacher to use the toilet (a ruse to see Bob) but Sue is denied and told to get back to the class. Bob takes Rita to a show house on a newly built housing development to have sex.

Later, Michelle finds a packet of condoms in Bob's trousers whilst ironing them and they argue. During the argument, it is revealed that Michelle does not like sex, which frustrates Bob. It also turns out that Bob previously had an affair, discovered when Michelle found another woman's bracelet in their bed; the other woman had also been their babysitter. Michelle goes upstairs to get ready for their planned night out, just as Rita and Sue arrive as they are again babysitting. Bob warns the girls that Michelle is suspicious and will ask them questions, but they convince Michelle that Bob is not sleeping with either of them.

After their night out, Bob and Michelle start arguing again, this time in front of Rita and Sue, who desperately try not to laugh. Michelle snaps at the girls, then storms off to bed. Rita and Sue make their own way home, unhappy that Bob cannot take them in his car and have sex with them again. That night, Michelle decides to let Bob have sex with her to stop him going off with other women, but it goes badly.

The next day, on a school trip, Sue gets into a fight with a classmate who calls her a "slag" because she is rumoured to be seeing a married man. Later, Rita and Sue meet Bob again for sex, but he cannot get an erection, embarrassing himself and leaving Rita and Sue unsatisfied. He takes them out to a club where Michelle's friend, Mavis, spots Bob with the girls. Bob warns the girls that Mavis will surely tell Michelle that she saw them together.

The next day, Mavis rushes around to tell Michelle as expected, and Michelle gets Mavis to drive her to Rita's house. Michelle drags Rita out of her house and into Mavis's car and takes her to Sue's flat to confront them both, with Bob arriving there at the same time. Michelle, Bob, Rita, Sue, and Sue's parents have a big argument in the street, causing a scene in front of all the neighbours. Michelle blames the girls for being slutty, but Sue retorts that the reason Bob cheats on her is because she does not have enough sex with him, which infuriates Michelle even more. After everybody blames each other and Bob and Sue's drunken father almost come to blows, Rita's brothers come to rescue her on their motorbikes. Michelle goes home humiliated, ransacks the house, and then leaves Bob for good, taking the children with her.

The next day, Sue goes to Rita's house to walk to school together. Rita tells her that she is no longer going, even though they are due to leave school in two weeks, because she is pregnant with Bob's child. She admits to having seen Bob a few times without Sue, and says she is moving in with him now that Michelle has left him. When Bob arrives to collect Rita, Sue is enraged and tells them both to get lost.

Sue starts dating Aslam as a rebound to get over Bob. As they grow closer, Sue even brings him to her home. However, her father comes home from the pub drunk and shouts racist abuse at Aslam, causing Sue to leave home and move in with Aslam and his sister.

Some time later, Sue finds out that Rita has suffered a miscarriage, and visits her in hospital. On the way out, Bob invites Sue for another sexual escapade, but she rebuffs him. He still gives Sue a lift home, but Aslam sees her getting out of Bob's car and threatens her, as he thinks that she was out having sex with Bob.

While Bob and Rita are about to have sex at their house, Bob accidentally calls out Sue's name. This infuriates Rita, who assumes Bob is now seeing Sue behind her back. She storms out of the house and goes to confront Sue. When Rita tells Aslam of her suspicions, Aslam violently attacks Sue. Despite everything, Rita comes to Sue's defence and kicks Aslam in the knee. Sue then kicks him in his groin, before they both make a hasty escape. They go to Bob's house, where Rita tends to Sue's wounds, but Aslam shows up at the front door. They refuse to let him in, but Aslam tries to find a way to break in, all the while trying to convince Sue to come back to him. The situation is interrupted by the arrival of the police, having been called by a neighbour. Aslam then runs off, with the police in pursuit.

When Bob returns home, Rita tells him that she is letting Sue move in with them, regardless of Bob's wishes. The two girls then go upstairs, leaving Bob feeling like a guest in his own home. However, when Bob goes upstairs into the bedroom, he finds both girls waiting for him in bed, and dives in to join them.

Cast[edit]

  • Siobhan Finneran as Rita
  • Michelle Holmes as Sue
  • George Costigan as Bob
  • Lesley Sharp as Michelle
  • Kulvinder Ghir as Aslam
  • Willie Ross and Patti Nichols as Sue's parents
  • Danny O'Dea as Paddy
  • Maureen Long as Rita's mother
  • David Britton, Mark Crampton, Stuart Googwin, Max Jackman, Andrew Krauz and Simon Waring as Rita's brothers
  • Joyce Pembroke as Lawnmower Lil
  • Jane Atkinson as Helen
  • Bryan Heeley as Michael
  • Paul Oldham as Lee
  • Bernard Wrigley as Teacher
  • Dennis Conlon as Taxi Driver
  • Black Lace (Alan Barton and Dene Michael) as themselves
  • Nancy Pute as Mavis
  • Paul Hedges as Hosepipe Harry
  • Kailash Patel as Aslam's Sister

Production[edit]

Filming locations[edit]

Some of the filming locations around West Yorkshire include:[4]

  • Buttershaw – Rita's house; Sue's flat; the school; The Beacon pub on Reevy Road West from the very first scene. All of these have now been demolished.
  • Baildon – Bob's house (5 Bramham Drive); Moorland scenes.
  • Bradford – Aslam's house (Alexandra Street); Luna Radio Kars (Leeds Road).
  • Haworth – the school trip to the Brontë Parsonage.
  • Woodhead Road recreation ground, between Legrams Lane and Great Horton Road.
  • Staveley Garages in Shipley.

Critical reception[edit]

Writing in The Guardian, film critic Derek Malcolm gave the film a mostly positive review, praising all of the main cast as "excellent", and stated that "Siobhan Finneran and Michelle Holmes play the girls with the kind of authenticity that precludes glamour in favour of guts and garters...". He also praised director Alan Clarke's ability to "energise the whole thing with ace professionalism, just occasionally seeing the funny side of what is essentially a sad story...". He goes on to say that the film avoids sentimentality but lacks something; "[the film] wipes the comfort from the face of a lot of dimly perceived and sloppy notions, but it replaces those notions with nothing."[5]

The film gained a mostly positive reception from critics in the US.[6][7][8][9][10] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave it 3 out of 4 stars, and having watched it twice noted that some audiences were uneasy at its mixed tone, calling it "angry", "sometimes depressing", and "more interested in human nature than in selling lots of tickets with lots of sex."[11]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "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. 28.
  2. ^ Sheila Benson (25 April 1993). "Two Attempts at Social Comment Hit The Mark". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
  3. ^ a b Liam Allen (22 October 2010). "The Arbor: In the footsteps of Rita, Sue and Bob". BBC News. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
  4. ^ "Where was 'Rita, Sue and Bob Too' filmed?". British Film Locations. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  5. ^ Derek Malcolm (3 September 1987). "Boy's own photo album (film reviews)". The Guardian.
  6. ^ Janet Maslin (17 July 1987). "Film: Togetherness in 'Rita, Sue and Bob Too'". New York Times. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
  7. ^ Sheila Benson (20 January 2011). "Movie Review : Love's Got Nothing To Do With 'Rita, Sue & Bob'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
  8. ^ Sheila Benson (9 August 1987). "3 Savage Commentaries on the British Scene". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
  9. ^ "'Rita, Sue and Bob, Too' (R)". Washington Post. 22 August 1987. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
  10. ^ Dave Kehr (2 October 1987). "'Rita' Captures The Spirit of England's Other Side". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
  11. ^ Roger Ebert (2 October 1987). "Rita, Sue & Bob, Too". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 4 April 2020.

External links[edit]