Click here to visit our new site -->
					   
		  CafeDVD 2.0   
 |  
    
      
        
          
            | 
             | 
             
             
              
		   
                
                   The Go-Between (1970)
                     | 
                 
                
                  
                    
                      
                        | 
                           
                           
                         | 
                       
                      
                        | 
                           
                          
                          Rating:
                           
                         | 
                        
 
 
 | 
                   
                  
                    | Starring:  | 
                    
Julie Christie,
Alan Bates,
Margaret Leighton,
Michael Redgrave,
Dominic Guard,
Michael Gough,
Edward Fox,
Richard Gibson,
Roger Lloyd-Pack,
Keith Buckley,
John Rees
 | 
                   
                  
                    | Director: 
 | 
                    
 
Joseph Losey
 | 
                   
                  
                    | Category:  | 
                    
Romance Classics,
United Kingdom,
Classic Dramas,
Classics,
Romantic Dramas
 | 
                   
                  
                    | Studio:  | 
                    
 | 
                   
                    Subtitles:  | 
                    
  | 
                   
                  
                    
Length:  | 
                    
118
  | 
                   
                    | 
 | 
 |  
 
 | 
                
                  
                | 
 
            | 
         
        
          | 
            
 | 
            | 
      
    
            
   
     
          | 
       
         
            
              |  
                 
In the summer of 1900, a young boy named Leo Colston becomes the go-between for an illicit love affair between a wealthy young woman and a farmer, leading to unexpected consequences. The film explores themes of innocence, social class, and the loss of childhood innocence.
                 
               | 
                | 
             
           
         |  
          | 
       
      
      
        |   | 
          | 
       
      
        |   | 
          | 
       
      
        
  | 
       
      
        |   | 
        
          
              
             |  
           
         | 
        
     
 |