Privilege is a British film directed by Peter Watkins. It was released in 1967 being produced by John Heyman. Story: Johnny Speight. Script: Norman Bogner. Some of it was filmed on location in Birmingham, England, partly at Birmingham City F.C.'s St Andrew's stadium and at Birmingham Town Hall. The story is set in the then near-future of the 1970s and concerns a disillusioned pop singer, played by Jones, who is manipulated by the church and state which seek to turn him into a messianic leader. The film was greatly influenced by the award-winning 1962 Wolf Koenig/Roman Kroitor National Film... Board of Canada documentary Lonely Boy, which in cinema verité style follows the growing hysteria surrounding then teen idol Paul Anka, with some scenes being almost one-to-one reproductions of the earlier work. Director Watkins had made a study of this film to prepare himself for filming Privilege. A DVD release of Privilege included Lonely Boy as well as an excerpt of an essay on that film as extra features.
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| Release date: | February 28, 1967 |
| Directed by: | Peter Watkins |
| Runtime: | 103 Minutes |
| Producer: | John Heyman, Peter Watkins, Albert Finney |
| Editor: | John Trumper |
| Music by: | Mike Leander |
| Cinematography: | Peter Suschitzky |
| Screenplay by: | Norman Bogner, Peter Watkins |
| Genre: | Musical, Science Fiction, Comedy |