moviebox header nav
moviebox search icon
muted

The Long Day Closes

1993

R

1 h 25 m

United Kingdom

Biography

Drama

A lyrical reverie about a young Liverpool boy coming of age in the 1950s among his loving family and the austere Catholic Church as he enters the rigors of school, nurtures a bedazzled love of the movies and longs for companionship.
More

7.3 /10

4424 people rated

Watch Online

Watch in App

Episodes

Top Cast

User Review

Episodes
Top Cast
User Review

Episodes

film
lklk
Netflix
Plex
Top Cast(19)
starring avatar
Leigh McCormack
Bud
starring avatar
Marjorie Yates
Mother
starring avatar
Anthony Watson
Kevin
starring avatar
Nicholas Lamont
John
default avatar
Ayse Owens
Helen
starring avatar
Tina Malone
Edna
default avatar
Jimmy Wilde
Curly
default avatar
Robin Polley
Mr. Nicholls
starring avatar
Peter Ivatts
Mr. Bushell
default avatar
Joy Blakeman
Frances
default avatar
Denise Thomas
Jean
starring avatar
Patricia Morison
Amy
default avatar
Gavin Mawdsley
Billy
default avatar
Kirk McLaughlin
Labourer
default avatar
Kirk McLaughlin
Christ
default avatar
Mark Heath
Black Man
default avatar
Victoria Davies
Nun
default avatar
Brenda Peters
Nurse
default avatar
Kerl Skeggs
Albie

User Review

author avatar

Deepa_Damanta

20/03/2026 14:05
The Long Day Closes
author avatar

ᴇʟɪʏᴀs ᴛ

29/05/2023 16:10
The Long Day Closes_720p(480P)
author avatar

Joy mazz

29/05/2023 15:44
source: The Long Day Closes
author avatar

Chocolate babies

18/11/2022 09:32
Trailer—The Long Day Closes
author avatar

WhitneyBaby

16/11/2022 09:44
The Long Day Closes
author avatar

mzz Lois

16/11/2022 04:30
"The Long Day Closes" is one of the stranger films I've ever seen. In many ways, it's a lovely and highly artistic film. But, sadly, it's also pretty much plotless (at least in the traditional sense) and dull. In other words, it's an artsy film that the average viewer will hate but 'smart' people will adore. The story is like looking into an adult's mind and pulling out pieces of their childhood. The pieces are not always connected and mostly show snippets of the child's life during a short period of time...and it's all set to an ever-present sound track...almost like a music video. If you want a plot, connections between scenes and a fast (or even normal) pace, try another film. While it looks almost like poetry put to life, the story is also amazingly lifeless and uninvolving.
author avatar

C'est Dieu Qui Donne

16/11/2022 04:30
This is among the ten best films I have seen of childhood and of life in a family. Admittedly, the father is missing - one might say, mercifully - but this film shows the tenderness and humanity among the mother and children tenderly and, surprisingly, joyfully. The mother is the centre of the piece and superbly portrayed. For those who want a vision of childhood, not romanticized, this is as good as it can get.
author avatar

Anisha Oli

16/11/2022 04:30
My one-line summary might seem to limit one's approach to Terence Davies' magnificent meditation; however, I stand by my assessment: this is the richest (visually and emotionally) and most rewarding cinematic rumination on awakening self-awareness that English-speakers currently have. Though highly personal, there's more here in a single sequence on the loneliness and isolation of realizing and growing into one's queerness, one's affinity with a particular bent of art and aesthetics than the entire oevre of Peter Greenaway. Like Jarman, but at once both more poetic and passionate, The Long Day Closes is non-linear, meant to be savored one aching moment at a time.
author avatar

Poppington_1Z

16/11/2022 04:30
A stunning exercise in pure cinema. This is the third and final part of his autobiographical Childhood Trilogy. He uses very a very stylized presentation of snippets of memory (Proust-like) overlaid with snips of movie soundtracks and songs to evoke the emotional content of coming to terms with himself in a loving family (at last). If you have seen Visions of Light, this is what it was all about. There is not a wasted frame in this film. Beautifully conceived jump shots, sound over lays and an overhead tracking jump shot that is simply amazing. If you a looking for a plot line or "story telling" you will not find it here. If you are looking for amazingly true and honest cinema that is like moving frames of Vermeer, this is for you.
author avatar

Genia

16/11/2022 04:30
A sad and lonely boy, Bud (Leigh McCormack) struggles through his days. With cinema as his main source of solace, he haunts the local movie-house. All the while, his family looms large in our peripheral vision as do the menacing bullies of his school, but Bud is the center of attention both from the camera's angle and from his doting family. This is a love letter to film, with plenty of classic film references and an endless soundtrack of classic music. The story itself is not important, other than for us to realize that movies offer us an escape no matter how dreary our lives may be. Most of us, thankfully, do not live as sad an existence as Bud. But most of us love movies to a greater or lesser degree and have a favorite that we can dive into when times are bad.
Disclaimer: All videos and pictures on MovieBox are from the Internet, and their copyrights belong to the original creators. We only provide webpage services and do not store, record, or upload any content.