You can see I'm trying to categorize my movies. These were set in England.
An Education
1961 England. According to this movie it was a time when women went to college to find a good husband or ended up educated spinsters. This young girl is working hard to get into Oxford, and she's got the grades. She takes up with a man she eventually figures out is a con artist and when he asks her to marry him, her father is relieved because then he won't have to pay for college, but her teachers, including Emma Thompson in a small but very well-played role, try to keep her focused on her education. There are two educations in this movie: the young girl getting an education in sex from this older man, and the futility of getting an education because the only career paths for an educated woman during that era were dull spinsterish teaching and going into government service.
The Damn United
This movie gets a lot of good reviews. It is based upon the true story of a soccer coach in England, Brian Clough, who briefly coaches the Leeds United soccer team in 1974. It was pretty good, although I would have enjoyed it more if I was a fan of English football. I didn't realize it covered a 44 day time span until just now when I read a review. I thought it covered a couple of years. Have to admit I'm a little lukewarm on it. Maybe if I watched it again I'd see more to like.
Bronson
"Charlie Bronson (born Michael Petersen) has the distinction of being Britain's Most Notorious Criminal. Despite never having killed anyone, and mostly being a petty thief, at the age of 56 he has spent 34 years in prison, 30 in solitary confinement. He has also won awards for his art and poetry. " - Netflix
This was a very strange movie, and it didn't have a point. There is no closure on the story: the guy is still in prison, still acting like a fool, and he should stay there because he has no social skills whatsoever. He has no humanity, and they didn't present information about his art and poetry to an extent that we could appreciate that he has any talent. It wasn't a documentary, which is probably what's wrong with it: that would have made more sense to have his qualities presented to us in a sane, logical manner instead of 'artistically.'