Laurence Olivier provides introductory narration over a moving aerial shot of 1919 London: "After four long years of
war, the men are coming home. Hundreds and hundreds of houses are becoming homes once more". The film focuses on the Gibbons family – Frank, his wife Ethel, their three children Reg, Vi and Queenie, his widowed sister Sylvia and Ethel's mother – after they settle in a rented house in
South London. Frank is delighted that his next-door neighbour is Bob Mitchell, a friend from his
army days. Frank finds employment with a travel agency, arranging tours of
Western Front battlefields. As the children grow up and the country adapts to peacetime, the family attend the
British Empire Exhibition held at
Wembley in 1924 and acquire their first
crystal radio around Christmas 1925. During the
General Strike of 1926 (in which Frank and Bob volunteer as driver and conductor of a bus), Reg is injured in a brawl. Vi blames Sam, her socialist boyfriend, who had brought her brother to the area, but eventually her anger dissipates and she marries him. In 1928, Queenie wins a
Charleston dance contest. In 1929 Sam and Vi attend one of the new
talking pictures,
The Broadway Melody, at the cinema. News of the electoral rise of the German
Nazi Party begins to appear in newspapers. Later, Reg marries his girlfriend Phyl. Bob's son, Billy, who has joined the
Royal Navy, has been going out with Queenie, and proposes to her. She turns him down, and Billy asks her if there's anyone else, and if there is, why didn't she tell him. He then guesses that the other man is married. One night, on coming home from a drunken 1931 regimental reunion, Bob expresses his faith in the
League of Nations, scoffing at Frank's concerns about the recent
Japanese invasion of Manchuria. They try to keep quiet but inadvertently wake Ethel, who packs Bob off home and Frank to bed, when she notices a letter left by Queenie, who has run off with the married man. Ethel vows never to forgive her. As time passes, the family mourn the death of Reg and Phyl in a car crash, Ethel's mother dies of pneumonia after influenza, and Aunt Sylvia discovers
spiritualism. Some time afterwards, in
Hyde Park, Frank and Ethel briefly witness a member of the
British Union of Fascists trying to stir up
anti-Semitic sentiment among listeners.
Stanley Baldwin wins the
1935 United Kingdom general election. In January 1936, King
George V dies; Frank and Ethel join the crowds filing past his coffin. King
Edward VIII abdicates 11 months later. In 1938,
Neville Chamberlain returns from
Munich, celebrating "
peace in our time” with a cheering crowd outside
10 Downing Street, to Frank's disgust. On leave from the
navy, Billy visits the family with news of Queenie. Abandoned by her lover, she and another woman had opened a
tearoom in France to make ends meet. She deeply regretted leaving home. Billy further reveals he has married Queenie and brought her back to London. Ethel offers her forgiveness. With a
new war still looming despite the Agreement, Queenie leaves her baby with her parents and sails to join her husband in
Singapore. Faced with an
empty nest, Frank and Ethel leave their house to move to a flat with Billy and Queenie's son. The film closes with a tracking shot of 1939 London. ==Cast==