Performing: Jane Asher, John Moulder-Brown, Diana Dors, Burt Kwouk, Eduard Linkers, Karl Michael Vogler, Jerzy Skolimowski, Peter Martin Urtel, Robert Rietty, Erika Wackernagel, Jon Laurimore, John Tatum, Karl Ludwig Lindt
David Lynch has stated that Deep End is the only colour film worth seeing—indeed, Jerzy Skolimowski's seventh feature is remembered above all as an aesthetic achievement, with flawless production design and colour grading, highlighting a portrait of adolescent urges in cold working-class England in the 1960s. 15-year-old Mike starts work in a London bathhouse. Also working there is Susan, an attractive girl ten years older than him, who is romancing two men at the same time. Mike also falls in love with her. The girl becomes the object of the boy's obsession, who begins to spy on her every day after work.