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It Always Rains on Sunday

It Always Rains on Sunday

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BFI Film Classics

It Always Rains on Sunday

Lynda Nead

Performing Arts / Film / General

Robert Hamer's 'Dark Ealing' It Always Rains on Sunday (1947) is a claustrophobic domestic melodrama, combining elements of film noir and gritty realism, in the story of a frustrated housewife, Rose Sandigate (Googie Withers), who rekindles a former love affair with an escaped convict, Tommy Swann (John McCallum). Praised by critics upon its release, the film came during a time when Britain had barely begun to recover from World War II and depicted an East End of bombsites, rationing and uneasy gender relations.

Lynda Nead's insightful study argues that Hamer's film captures the mood and experience of post-war Britain in a uniquely visceral style. Examining its intensely dramatic evocation of London's East End, with its crowded terraced homes, constant rain and bleak cold, she unpacks the factors that contribute to the film's atmosphere and the moment of its making: its detailed composition of exteriors and interiors; its representation of women and female desire; and its depiction of men, the husbands, spivs and criminals of this tale of East End streets.

Lynda Nead is Visiting Professor of History of Art at The Courtauld, London, UK, Her books include: Victorian Babylon: People, Streets and Images in Nineteenth-Century London (2000); The Haunted Gallery: Painting, Photography, Film c. 1900 (2008); The Tiger in the Smoke: Art and Culture in Post-war Britain (2017) and The Female Nude: Art, Obscenity and Sexuality (2024). Her most recent book is British Blonde: Women, Desire and the Image in Post-war Britain (2025).

Publication Date: 01 October 2026
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Imprint: British Film Institute
ISBN-13: 9781839026942
Format: Paperback softback
Page Count: 96
Weight (oz): 16.0

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