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  1. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning is a 1960 British kitchen sink drama film directed by Karel Reisz and produced by Tony Richardson. It is an adaptation of the 1958 novel of the same name by Alan Sillitoe, with Sillitoe himself writing the screenplay.

  2. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning: Directed by Karel Reisz. With Albert Finney, Shirley Anne Field, Rachel Roberts, Hylda Baker. A rebellious, hard-living factory worker juggles relationships with two women, one of whom is married to another man but pregnant with his child.

    • (9,3K)
    • Drama, Romance
    • Karel Reisz
    • 1961-04-03
  3. Albert Finney, in his first starring role is Arthur Seaton, a young man in working-class Nottingham. By day, he slaves away in a dreary job at a local factory, while by night and weekend he...

  4. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, British film drama, released in 1960, that is one of the best of the Angry Young Men movies that emanated from England in the late 1950s and ’60s. In his first starring role, Albert Finney played a charismatic man who seems destined to follow in his parents’ and grandparents’ footsteps by pursuing a ...

    • Lee Pfeiffer
  5. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning is the first novel by British author Alan Sillitoe and won the Author's Club First Novel Award. It was adapted by Sillitoe into the 1960 film of the same name starring Albert Finney , directed by Karel Reisz , and in 1964 was adapted by David Brett as a play for the Nottingham Playhouse , with Ian ...

    • Alan Sillitoe
    • 1958
  6. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning. In a Nottingham factory, Arthur Seaton works in a mindless haze, but his weekends are even more muddled due to his love affairs and his alcohol problem....

    • (15)
    • Drama
    • R
  7. 13 de jan. de 2022 · Directed by. Karel Reisz. Produced by. Tony Richardson. Written by. Alan Sillitoe. Featuring. Albert Finney, Shirley Anne Field, Rachel Roberts. Running time. 89 minutes. Albert Finney’s powerhouse performance as a Nottingham factory worker changed British screen acting, just as Karel Reisz’s incisive and authentic film changed British cinema.