7-Up (The Michael Apted documentary series)

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I havent seen this since 35up I dont tink. Its been shown on TV now and then. I think 42up was in the cinema, but I missed it. 35 was depressing enough.

Trayce (trayce), Friday, 16 September 2005 05:00 (twenty years ago)

It's because I'm obsessed that I want to do it properly, starting with 7-Up!

In the search for perfection lies the root of neurosis...

Bob Six (bobbysix), Friday, 16 September 2005 06:11 (twenty years ago)

Damn I missed this. Think it might get repeated on ITV2 or something?

Also people seems to age rapidly between 42 and 49. Some of them looked quite old indeed...
-- Bob Six (bobbysixe...) (webmail), Yesterday 10:42 PM. (later) (link)

uh oh.

mark grout (mark grout), Friday, 16 September 2005 07:14 (twenty years ago)

Mark - quick summary of what I learnt from it:

- you enter your 40s looking young and leave them looking old

- you move away from career ambitions and think about contentment, concerning yourself with home/family/garden/holiday home/singing in the choir/village cricket

- if you didn't choose a job/career you liked, then this is the period where life gets hard (same applies for choice of partner as well)

- if you develop a serious health problem (rheumatoid arthritis etc), life goes really seriously downhill and hello poverty

- there's an aura of sadness around most 49ers

Bob Six (bobbysix), Friday, 16 September 2005 10:15 (twenty years ago)

- you enter your 40s looking young and leave them looking old

I'm 44, I looked young at 40, don't know if I still do, so who knows.


- you move away from career ambitions and think about contentment, concerning yourself with home/family/garden/holiday home/singing in the choir/village cricket

Kinda there already, but still no cricket/choir.

- if you didn't choose a job/career you liked, then this is the period where life gets hard (same applies for choice of partner as well)

Just about OK

- if you develop a serious health problem (rheumatoid arthritis etc), life goes really seriously downhill and hello poverty

Hah, been there, had that, got better.

- there's an aura of sadness around most 49ers

I'm still alive and that's something.

mark grout (mark grout), Friday, 16 September 2005 10:20 (twenty years ago)

Well mark, on the basis of your posts, and your occasional WDYLL pics, I'd always assumed you were in your mid 30s.

JimD (JimD), Friday, 16 September 2005 10:27 (twenty years ago)

Was there an aura of sadness? A lot of them seemed to be... both resigned and happy, if you can imagine that; more comfortable.

The woman who now lives in Scotland (I've already forgotten all of their names) seemed such a fantastic person; when she was talking back to Apted I was practically cheering.

spontine (cis), Friday, 16 September 2005 10:28 (twenty years ago)

My objectivity might be a bit off, being a stakeholder in the forty-something community myself.

Bob Six (bobbysix), Friday, 16 September 2005 11:07 (twenty years ago)

So by Bob Six's reckoning, I'll look 48 by the time I'm 49.

mark grout (mark grout), Friday, 16 September 2005 11:22 (twenty years ago)

one year passes...
Can't wait for 49 Up, which opens here soon. Ebert, perhaps the biggest booster of the series (it's in his Top 10 of all time), interviews Apted here.

jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 19 October 2006 19:46 (nineteen years ago)

two weeks pass...
This was very good. As the series progresses, the films get longer and longer, which can sometimes make them feel tedious, esp. when several of the stories are largely the same. But I'm still transfixed by watching the interviewees basically grow up before me, and this installment in particular seemed to go deeper into exploring the subjects' qualms about the project. (Jackie's confrontation with Apted about how she's portrated was especially riveting.)

Surprised to see that so many interviewees have grandchildren now, before the age of 50. Also a bit surprised that John agreed to take part, since he didn't appear in 28 or 42, and his appearance in 35 seemed more like an effort to polish his image as an upper-crust snob and advertise his charity work than anything else.

When Nick announced that he and his first wife had gotten divorced, I found myself saying "Yes!" out loud. I mean, I never thought they seemed like a good match, but I suppose frivolous judgments such as mine is exactly why the interviewees dislike being put on display like this.

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 7 November 2006 17:28 (nineteen years ago)

(Sorry for the spoilers!)

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 7 November 2006 17:30 (nineteen years ago)

seven months pass...

Over the past few weeks I watched the entire series through Netflix. I just finished the latest installment about an hour ago.

I realize the next one won't be out for another 5 years, but I feel compelled to offer quick thoughts on some of the participants.

I liked Tony a lot until the weird "I'm like everyone else - I prefer to be with people from my own culture" comments in 49 up. He's inspiring because he makes me think that I, or anyone else, really, could manage to become a semi-successful professional actor. In 28 up, he's absolutely awful in his acting lessons, but there he is in the successive installments, as an extra, or in that commercial with the naked people running around. Tony - the sort of likeable racist!

Jackie, Lynn and Sue are really, really boring, except when Sue sang karaoke in 42 up. That was awesome.

Everyone mentions the supposed big turnaround in Suzy's life, comparing her at 21 and then afterward. She still seems to have an underlying sorrow in her eyes, but maybe that's just me. Then again, most of the participants in this series seem to have a mournful quality.

I want to like Andrew, but he's so tight-lipped that watching his progress through the years is much less revealing than most of the other participants. In 49 up, Andrew says he and the other two rich kids (Charles and John) have been very guarded on camera, starting with the 21 film. Apted asks him what he's guarding, and Andrew pauses, says he's "Guarded about being guarded...", and then smiles smugly. Moving on...

John refused to participate in 28, and then reappeared for 35, supposedly to publicize his Oxfam charity work in Bulgaria, before disappearing again in 42. He's back in 49, and although his asshole persona seems to be slightly fading, it's still grimly evident in every word he says.

With every next disc, I was disappointed that Charles had again refused to be filmed, which is ironic because he's a documentarian himself, working on Touching the Void. In fact, on Wikipedia it says "Michael Apted revealed that Charles had attempted to sue him when he refused to remove his appearances from the archive sequences in 49 Up." Damn!

Paul has been working at sign making company for ten years, and he STILL hasn't asked for or received a raise??

Symon seems very personable, so it's kind of strange to me that 2 of his 5 kids still won't speak to him.

It was sad watching Nick throw his intellectual weight into nuclear fission research in the 1980s, because we all know how that turned out.

Peter dropped out of the series after 28 up, apparently after criticism in the press over his political beliefs. On Wikipedia it says he "became a lawyer and eventually a musician and singer-songwriter", in a band called The Good Intentions.

I've always liked Bruce a lot, even though my girlfriend quite correctly points out that he is boring.

Then there's Neil, of course. The transformation in his personality from 7 to 28 are some of the most heartbreaking moments in the entire series. Now he's involved in local politics. I wonder if his presence in the Up! series has helped or hindered his political career.

Z S, Monday, 25 June 2007 06:16 (eighteen years ago)

Yeah Neil is the real focal point of the series, because his life has been the strangest of them all. The others all had lives that panned out relatively normally, really. I found 49up SO DEPRESSING, for reasons others stated above. Regrets and resignation and rapid aging. It really makes me down about my own mortality.

Trayce, Monday, 25 June 2007 06:45 (eighteen years ago)

nine months pass...

havent read the thread but this gets kindof brutal to watch multiple "episodes" or whatever in a row (most are on netflix watch it now btw). constantly seeing the flashbacks to everyone at 7 is like being shown home movies of someone elses kids over and over again

johnny crunch, Tuesday, 8 April 2008 22:09 (eighteen years ago)

I did this a few months ago. I think it's worth it, although because there are so many flashbacks in each one, it gets sort of repetitive after a while: by 42-Up I was able to recite particular interview answers verbatim.

-- jaymc (jaymc), Wednesday, September 14, 2005 7:13 AM (2 years ago) Bookmark Link

jaymc, Tuesday, 8 April 2008 22:24 (eighteen years ago)

four years pass...

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/9206960/Seven-Up-Now-we-are-56.html

back next month (apologies for the Torygraph link). i hope Neil's alright.

seems like almost the entire thing is on You Tube atm in episode-by-episode feature length chunks.

piscesx, Friday, 20 April 2012 01:28 (fourteen years ago)

three weeks pass...

BOM BOM BOMMMMM. tonight. so psyched for this!
apparently thirteen of the original fourteen participants are involved; i am thinking this includes the kid of the kind of private-school-three who stopped participating and then went on to become a documentarian for channel four.

blossom smulch (schlump), Monday, 14 May 2012 10:20 (fourteen years ago)

I have bad news for you

o s– man (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 14 May 2012 10:27 (fourteen years ago)

anyway yes, excellent news

o s– man (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 14 May 2012 10:29 (fourteen years ago)

I missed out quite a few updates, and the kids are quite interested in the concept.

Mark G, Monday, 14 May 2012 10:34 (fourteen years ago)

i watched the whole thing in a couple of weeks a year or so ago. so amazing. as valuable a document on thatcherism as there is, too.

blossom smulch (schlump), Monday, 14 May 2012 10:36 (fourteen years ago)

the poor people did come rushing in iirc

Autumn Almanac, Monday, 14 May 2012 10:40 (fourteen years ago)

All are still alive, though.

Mark G, Monday, 14 May 2012 10:45 (fourteen years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ApamMLKaCVo&feature=player_detailpage#t=3087s

What does everyone think of John's comments here?

aonghus, Monday, 14 May 2012 10:57 (fourteen years ago)

That's an hour-long show!

Mark G, Monday, 14 May 2012 11:00 (fourteen years ago)

Oops, that didn't work quite the way I thought it would. I mean, what does everyone think of John's comments starting at 51:29 of the above video?

aonghus, Monday, 14 May 2012 11:02 (fourteen years ago)

Let's be charitable:

John was shackled to a portrait of himself at 7 that was "all poor peopple are smelly and should be (etc)" from the first episode. I can believe he had a life of priv and fast-track, and felt for more than one reason he had to make good for his previous 'entitleness' attitude. (to be fair, during the first ep they had a party for all 14 participants and he was all "actually, they were all jolly good fun and nice" etc)

So, don't know what 'comments' you are referring to, but he has latterly been very "this programme is the cross I have to bear" ...

Mark G, Monday, 14 May 2012 11:03 (fourteen years ago)

I mean these comments in particular:
"I suspect that why this program is compelling and interesting for viewers, and I quite see why it is, is because really it's like 'Big Brother' or 'I'm A Celebrity, Get Me Out Of Here', it is actually real-life TV and with the added bonus that you can see people grow old, lose their hair, get fat. Fascinating, I'm sure, but does it have any value? That's a different question."

He phrased it in a rather blunt fashion. The program certainly has more value than 'Big Brother', for instance. But there could be an element of truth in what he says. The show started out with more of a sociological aim and ended up being more about human interest. On the other hand, human interest isn't necessarily a bad reason to watch a show.

aonghus, Monday, 14 May 2012 12:15 (fourteen years ago)

So, there you go.

Mark G, Monday, 14 May 2012 13:01 (fourteen years ago)

Just thought it was an interesting statement that got me thinking. The series itself and its aims, much like the people featured on it, has changed at lot over the years. I don't think that's a bad thing. There must be something of value in it for me since I've sat down and watched every episode so far. I'm nervously looking forward to tonight's episode, in the sense that I feel it will probably be very interesting but also contain some depressing truths about life's difficulties.

aonghus, Monday, 14 May 2012 16:01 (fourteen years ago)

It's rare that you're able to witness the progression of a person's life outside of real time. Even if you're not seeing the whole picture (e.g. six-year chunks of missing time, the inevitable subjectivity of editing choices, etc.), the contracted nature of that presentation gives one a bit more perspective on the effects that class and environment and expectation have on how a person's life unfolds. I think it's an extremely worthwhile endeavor for that fact alone, but it's also just really engaging to see where these folks are after some time has elapsed.

Bob Bop Perano (Deric W. Haircare), Monday, 14 May 2012 16:15 (fourteen years ago)

nine months pass...

Just got back from 56 Up. I watched the 7 through 49 all in the span of about two weeks seven years ago, so this was the first one where I really felt time pass along with all of the participants. Man, it made me really emotional. The series is about not just the main interviewees but also their spouses, their parents, their children, their neighborhoods, their workplaces and friends.

pun lovin criminal (polyphonic), Wednesday, 27 February 2013 06:22 (thirteen years ago)

I've been holding off on this until I catch up with 49 Up. Saw 28/35/42 when they came out; I wrote about buying a box set I can't play (because of formatting) on another thread. The theatre that's been playing 56 ran the whole series a couple of months ago, but I couldn't get out that weekend. I really don't want to skip from 42 to 56.

clemenza, Wednesday, 27 February 2013 13:00 (thirteen years ago)

there's enough recapping in every edition that you can probably cope ok

( ͡° ͜ʖ͡°) (sic), Wednesday, 27 February 2013 13:59 (thirteen years ago)

Yes. It's not the gap that bothers me as much as, will I even take the time to see 49 Up if I skip ahead to 56? I know that parts of 49 will be incorporated into 56.

clemenza, Wednesday, 27 February 2013 14:39 (thirteen years ago)

three months pass...

LOL at the guy who rejoins the series only to plug his band.

(watching 56 Up right now)

Elvis Telecom, Sunday, 2 June 2013 05:12 (thirteen years ago)

fuck that guy

daft on the causes of punk (schlump), Sunday, 2 June 2013 05:18 (thirteen years ago)

& his shitty band

daft on the causes of punk (schlump), Sunday, 2 June 2013 05:18 (thirteen years ago)

i watched them all in a row earlier this year. lots of repetitive content, but mostly good. band guy not as annoying as posh guy who only appears to pimp his bulgarian charity or w/e. 70 Up should be interesting. hate the documentarian dude who hasnt done one since the early 70s more than anyone else

i wanna be a gabbneb baby (Hungry4Ass), Sunday, 2 June 2013 06:26 (thirteen years ago)

...Apted?

¬╡▫ ▫╞⌠ (sic), Sunday, 2 June 2013 08:02 (thirteen years ago)

He means Charles.
The self-promo aspect is very ugh, breaks the spell of the films.
How/what format are you watching it, ET?

A True White Kid that can Jump (Granny Dainger), Sunday, 2 June 2013 08:08 (thirteen years ago)

The three part version that aired on BBC was posted on USENET awhile back and am just getting around to it.

Elvis Telecom, Sunday, 2 June 2013 09:34 (thirteen years ago)

fuck that guy & his shitty band

Yeah, but if you freeze frame on what the tabloid said about him back in the 80s ("why is this man allowed to teach our kids?" or something) you can at least understand why he decided to be a bit wary of participating for the good of humanity.

Alba, Sunday, 2 June 2013 10:03 (thirteen years ago)

four months pass...

56 Up airing on PBS channel 13-New York tonight at 10

MrDasher, Monday, 14 October 2013 22:43 (twelve years ago)

nine months pass...

these are all on netflix USA, we are slowly (because of newborn who seemingly wants to go to bed every time we are ten minutes into an episode) getting through them, and they are wonderful. marcello is talking nonsense above, watching each episode and letting it unfold in full is clearly the best way to watch this. heart breaking every couple of minutes. we are only halfway through 21 Up but I am already pretty worried for about half of them. and oh my god, what a picture of britain's class system this is. also noticed that in the first episode the voiceover talks about meeting Britain's future business leaders and union leaders - seemingly not realising how marginalised union leaders will be in the future.

a biscuit/donut hybrid called “bisnuts” (stevie), Friday, 25 July 2014 10:12 (eleven years ago)

funny that

conrad, Friday, 25 July 2014 10:38 (eleven years ago)

i think that's my point? that what's taken as inevitable in 1963 is almost demolished by the time the series hits its later volumes?

it's fascinating seeing the changes in society as the series wears on, the pre-echoes and ripples of the change that surrounds them.

a biscuit/donut hybrid called “bisnuts” (stevie), Friday, 25 July 2014 10:54 (eleven years ago)

four years pass...

http://www.theguardian.com/film/2019/jun/01/seven-up-at-63-documentary-michael-apted-cameraman-george-jesse-turner-interview

I'm at least three behind, maybe four. I've got a box set up to 49, I think, that I can't play because it's the wrong region.

clemenza, Sunday, 2 June 2019 20:38 (seven years ago)

calz, it's easy to make any DVD player region free, a Google search with your model number will tell you how.

mfktz (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Sunday, 2 June 2019 20:42 (seven years ago)

We were shown Seven Up in school assembly in the mid-1970s. It was the talk of the school for the next couple of days.

mike t-diva, Friday, 17 April 2026 10:35 (one month ago)

The guy who refuses to appear is Charles, who ironically is a documentary film-maker himself. The pre-publicity for this show notes that we will "hear from him", whatever that means.

bored by endless ecstasy (anagram), Friday, 17 April 2026 11:02 (one month ago)

"I would have done it better"

Alba, Friday, 17 April 2026 11:09 (one month ago)

Always suspected that Charles refuses to contribute because he wants to hide his overpriviledged background, not at all untypical for posh media types.

Throw It Down Binman (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Friday, 17 April 2026 11:29 (one month ago)

I just bought the DVD set of this for my dad, for father’s day. 63 up hasn’t come out on DVD in the states tho

Cow_Art, Friday, 17 April 2026 11:30 (one month ago)

There was also Peter, who refused to appear for a long strech of time until he came back to get angry at Corbyn and plug his alt country band (Peter's, not Corbyn's).

a ZX spectrum is haunting Europe (Daniel_Rf), Friday, 17 April 2026 11:33 (one month ago)

lol stevie read yr four-posts-apart posts here

uploading this content requires perseveration (sic), Friday, 17 April 2026 11:34 (one month ago)

John also drifted away and came back to plug his Bulgaria charity I think

Alba, Friday, 17 April 2026 11:51 (one month ago)

John seems to be the best of the three posh lads

Throw It Down Binman (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Friday, 17 April 2026 12:19 (one month ago)

I think I preferred Andrew even if he was a bit wet.

Alba, Friday, 17 April 2026 12:27 (one month ago)

not keen on any of the posh ones tbh

suzy was perhaps the most interesting of them all in 21 up but she quickly reverted to type as a boring posh solicitor's wife

Throw It Down Binman (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Friday, 17 April 2026 12:39 (one month ago)

Suzy dropped out of the last one, as I recall.

mike t-diva, Friday, 17 April 2026 12:49 (one month ago)

lol stevie read yr four-posts-apart posts here

hahaha! we absolutely do keep saying these quotes to each other, too!

an uncharacteristically irritated Mr. Rogers (stevie), Friday, 17 April 2026 13:15 (one month ago)

I'm guessing it's clear now that I use bookmarks and do not read the older posts if a thread is updated

an uncharacteristically irritated Mr. Rogers (stevie), Friday, 17 April 2026 13:17 (one month ago)

I think the point of conflict with his hypothetical wife was that she wanted him to eat greens ("and say I don't like greens … which I don't") rather than go out, Suggs-style. Would be a good rewrite of My Girl though.

Alba, Friday, 17 April 2026 13:29 (one month ago)

I didn't want to eat my greens tonight.

Alba, Friday, 17 April 2026 13:30 (one month ago)

no, there's definitely a bit where he's panicking she'll want to go out and he doesn't want to go out. 30% of my interaction with my partner is based around it!!

an uncharacteristically irritated Mr. Rogers (stevie), Friday, 17 April 2026 13:52 (one month ago)


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