Posts Tagged ‘Ken Loach’

 

Looking for Eric

Special Delivery

February 28th, 2010

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On March 31, 1995, at a jam-packed, flashbulb-popping press conference, the beguilingly gifted Eric Cantona addressed the gathered throng. Earlier in the day, an appeals court had reduced his sentence to community service for the assault charge arising from the striker’s infamous kung-fu kick of a racist Crystal Palace supporter in January of that year.

“When seagulls follow the trawler it is because they think sardines will be thrown into the sea.”

And with a simple “Thank you very much” following that single enigmatic sentence, the Manchester United legend stood up from his seat and left his advisors, journalists and world football to ponder what the hell he might have meant as he waited out a planet-wide ban from football through September 1995 by learning the trumpet.

Fittingly, in “Looking for Eric,” the latest film from the outstanding Ken Loach, Cantona becomes the mentoring guide through the existential crisis of Eric Bishop, a middle aged Manchester postman and divorcee enveloped by incapacitating depression. His two teenaged sons defy him. While his oldest, adult daughter adores him, a favor she asks forces him to confront the heady mixture of feelings he has towards the wife he cowardly left decades before. “It doesn’t really matter anymore,” his ex-wife Lilly says wearily. Eric would rather Lilly detested him than simply suffer him with indifference. Overwhelmed with regret and self-loathing, Bishop has become adrift from his family, friends and co-workers. He barely has the energy or interest to roll a spliff. But when he does, the illusory Cantona appears in Bishop’s snug bedroom, which is a shrine to the footballing enigma dominated by the iconic poster of the triumphant Cantona, with his signature upturned collar, striking an imperious stance in the moment after his immaculate goal versus Sunderland in 1996. Together, the two Erics open a trunk of mementos Bishop kept closed securely at the foot of his bed and begin the process of helping Bishop recover himself.

The film contains many of Loach’s familiar themes. Vulnerability hounds the protagonist whose natural steel has become dented. As in “Raining Stones” and “My Name is Joe,” a well-meaning working class person is sucked into trouble not entirely of their making and seemingly beyond their immediate control. (Bishop’s eldest son is the instigator.) Loach and Paul Laverty, his regular screenwriter for the past fourteen years and seven films, still imbue the story with the recognizable ebbs and flows of ordinary life while never pandering to patronizing tones. “Looking for Eric” teems with the real-life combination of humor and pathos. And the first steps of a second chance with Lilly are handled truthfully and sincerely. Like “Riff-Raff,” the film also masterfully creates a Greek chorus of a sort, with genuine camaraderie among Bishop’s fellow postal workers who are a likable blend of personalities and viewpoints.

The camerawork is furnished by another Loach stalwart, cinematographer Barry Ackroyd, a superb technician at jimmying emotion into the cramped hallways, bedrooms, and kitchen of Bishop’s home. An Oscar nominee for his work on “The Hurt Locker,” Ackroyd excels in the ambiance of confinement, where space is suffocating and intimate.

As with the vast majority of Loach’s movies, the film is centered on a beautiful central performance, and Steve Evets is a revelation as Eric Bishop. Possessing a sunken cheeked, craggy face, he handles the darker moments with absorbing sadness as his facial features are marked with shadows like looming clouds. But Evets illustrates Bishop’s passion and enthusiasm with equal depth. He exhibits great zeal, especially when he recalls the first night he met Lilly at a dance contest 30 years before. And he’s a defiant, protective dad. It’s a believable, complex portrayal. In a stellar debut film performance, Stephanie Bishop gives the present-day Lilly grace and strength. The cast of workmates are a jovial, animated, and opinionated collection, especially John Henshaw as Meatballs, his closest friend, who habitually buys self-help books so Bishop’s mates can assist their friend during his trying time. (A visualization exercise where a half dozen of his work pals imagine themselves as Sammy Davis, Jr., Fidel Castro, Nelson Mandela, Mahatma Gandhi, Frank Sinatra and Cantona is a comic free-for-all.)

Retired since 1997, the 43-year-old Cantona in his post-football life has become, simply put, one of the coolest dudes on the planet. And he’s emerging as a notable presence as an actor; Cantona was quite good as the dashing, pretentious director in 2008’s “French Film.” In “Looking for Eric,” he’s funny, charming, sexy, and wise. (He’s also only seen when Bishop is alone.) The imaginary Cantona follows Bishop on his rounds and keeps him company during his soul searching; the two actors develop an engaging relationship. (Cantona even divulges that his most cherished moment in football was a pass, not a goal.) There’s sweetness to several of their scenes, especially when Cantona spouts proverbs in French, only for Bishop to exclaim exasperation at the English translation. Seagulls, indeed.

The film culminates with a rousing “Operation Cantona” spearheaded by Meatballs and coach loads of supporters which is anything but a fishing expedition. “Looking for Eric” is as close to a feel-good movie as Loach has made but still retains the integrity and authenticity which makes his films so powerful and clarifying.


The Hurt Locker

Full Metal Flak Jacket

October 2nd, 2009

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Since 1982, Kathryn Bigelow has amassed, upon reflection, one of the more intriguing resumes of the past thirty years. Until this year, in a decidedly mercurial body of work, she had directed seven distinct movies which followed no formula and were beholden to no genre; there is a discernible sense that she thrives on never repeating herself. She directed Willem Dafoe that year in his first credited film role in “The Loveless,” an homage to “The Wild One.” Five years later, she created the 1987 vampire flick “Near Dark,” a movie whose reputation only grows with time. At the end of the ‘80s, she filmed the Jamie Lee Curtis cop thriller “Blue Steel,” and followed it with 1991’s quotable cult classic, “Point Break,” and a personal late-night cable favorite, 1995’s Ralph Fiennes-Angela Bassett noir, “Strange Days.” In 2000, Sean Penn starred in the poorly received “The Weight of Water,” while in 2002, she made “K-19: The Widowmaker,” a critically well-regarded Harrison Ford flick set on a Soviet submarine which snared a mere 35 million dollars at the box office. Seven films over 20 years and each marked with an asterisk, most described with the caveat of guilty pleasure. In the summer of 2007, Bigelow transported an estimable crew and a cast of relative unknowns to Amman, Jordan, and, for the reported pittance of 11 million dollars, filmed her eighth feature-length film, “The Hurt Locker,” which chronicles the final month of deployment in Iraq for a U.S. Army bomb squad in 2004. For this film, no qualifier is necessary: “The Hurt Locker” is an unequivocally tremendous and authoritative achievement. It is the seminal work of her career.

Girded by seven painstaking sequences with each focusing vividly on a day in the field, “The Hurt Locker” is a film set during wartime but not reliant on action scenes blazing; it’s not classically heroic either. Raw, real, and suffocating, the seven lengthy and deliberate scenes are brilliantly executed gripping pillars of a movie entrenched in the working lives of soldiers who attempt to disarm bombs and improvised explosive devices. Bigelow sets this intensive, concentrated tone from the first moments of the film in a powerful opening chapter. Sergeant Matt Thompson (the chameleonic Guy Pearce) ploddingly walks in his protective suit like a moon-landed Apollo astronaut toward a bomb nestled in a deserted Baghdad street. Keeping watch with eyes darting from doorways to rooftops are the sensible Sergeant JT Sanborn (the dependably strong Anthony Mackie of “Half Nelson”) and the emotionally susceptible Specialist Owen Eldridge (an effective Brian Geraghty). The scene unfolds methodically, like the deep inhales and exhales from inside Thompson’s mask, and the stillness is disquieting and deceptive.

With 38 days left in their rotation, the explosive ordinance disposal team is joined by a new leader, Staff Sergeant William James (a swaggering Jeremy Renner), a brash veteran of 837 bomb detonations who is equally reckless and fastidious. Relatively young despite his experience, James is a hot-wired, fractious presence. (He cranks up Ministry to unwind.) There’s a healthy element of a character study in the script by Mark Boal, (who also penned the story which became the movie, “In the Valley of Elah,”), and the film delves into how the disparate personalities of the team coalesce, but, basically, it’s a story of daily vulnerability as the trio sets out alone in their armored vehicle to defuse the innumerable IEDs. Ever-present danger is the normality. Robots fixed with cameras glide around the bombs, but the devices require a human touch to silence them. In one instance, the team must decipher a pentagon of serpentine wires running from an IED dug into the city street to an apartment building; on another assignment, as circumspect stares bear down from urban rooftops, Sanborn and Eldridge, with guns drawn, scan for snipers as James attempts to dismantle a bomb lodged intricately inside a car. The camera work in these scenes by cinematographer Barry Ackroyd is superb. Ackroyd has filmed the vast majority of Ken Loach’s canon as well as Paul Greengrass’ “United 93,” and he excels at capturing images with a claustrophobic lens. From Glaswegian alleyways to London bed-sits or the cabin of a Boeing 757, and, now, a decimated Iraq, his camera provides a stark, palatable, unnerving intimacy. Ackroyd’s camera has never been afraid to expose the wrenching quotidian; “The Hurt Locker” doesn’t shy away either.

The film leaves Baghdad for an assignment in the desert where the team comes to the unintended assistance of a band of hired civilians led by “Contractor Team Leader” (a ruddy Ralph Fiennes). A firefight erupts. Amongst the mayhem, the scene illustrates jarringly beautiful cinematic shots of empty cartridges bouncing off the ground, and a fly daintily resting on an eyelash. The lengthy battle-field engagement highlights the judicious work of editors Bob Murawski, a veteran of Sam Raimi’s films, and Chris Innis, who expertly mesh the violence into the agonizingly protracted stand-off.

A tangential scene in which a vengeful Staff Sergeant James sneaks off the base for a planned act of retribution is the only hurried sequence in the film, and, consequently, the weakest. It’s unconvincing because it’s too quick and too brusque; the other emotionally charged moments develop and envelop with patient buildup, but this scene just flashes by. It also illustrates a flaw in the balance of the characters. While “The Hurt Locker” follows the three soldiers, the film tips its interest too heavily to the plight of Sergeant James. The movie shows scenes of his home life, and his paternal interaction with a cheeky, football-playing Iraqi kid who calls himself Beckham. It’s useful to the character’s edification but the two other team members could have profited from the same level of contextual perspective. The vulnerable Eldridge is fleshed out in a few illuminating scenes with an Army psychiatrist, Colonel John Cambridge (Christian Camargo), but very little is unearthed about his background. And Sanborn is underwritten, with bits of his life tossed out almost as asides. Especially when portrayed by an actor as stout as Mackie, who will become a more heralded movie presence in the next few years, it should be considered a missed opportunity.

But the final major sequence in Baghdad underscores the tenacious filmmaking exerted by Bigelow. An Iraqi man, an innocent pawn, with a time bomb clamped to his torso by a metal vest of chain and locks like an illusionist’s final harrowing escape, stands pleading in a vacant square. The team arrives at the military checkpoint and the emotion of the scene escalates as the helplessness the man and the American soldiers feel turns to anguish. Bigelow remains unrelenting to the end, with no respite from the tension, and no conclusion to a story where, in 2004, a soldier re-upped for war and misery in perpetuity.


May 15th, 2009

Ooh. Aah. Cantona. The French footballing legend provides philosophical succor to a Mancunian postman in “Looking for Eric,” a new comedy from Ken Loach opening in U.K. theaters next month.

While Terry Gilliam presents The Imaginairum of Doctor Parnassus” at Cannes, exciting word arrives that his ill-fated, infamous Don Quixote project has found new life.

Arriving in US theaters next month, “Dead Snow” is the Norwegian comedy horror flick where students on holiday find their camping trip interrupted by gold seeking Nazi zombies.

David Gritten of the Telegraph chronicles “Fish Tank” director Andrea Arnold, whom he coins a Well-Kept British Secret.

One Film Wonder: O Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo? Well, we’re not sure really. But in 1968, a limpid 17-year-old Leonard Whiting swooned with Olivia Hussey as the titular tragic teens in Franco Zeffirelli’s attractive, romping “Romeo and Juliet.” A half-dozen TV films and a bit of musical work followed — including vocals on an Alan Parsons Project album — as Whiting’s show business career faded. But Whiting and Hussey still resonate as one of film’s most enduring pair of star-crossed lovers.


Chop Shop

Darryl Strawberry Fields Forever

July 7th, 2008

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In one corner of Third World America, where pigeons are pets, a 12-year-old boy in Queens scrounges for chop shops purveyors in the shadow of the Flushing Line as constant flights from La Guardia glide across the Willets Point sky like unobtainable mirages. It’s a life teeming with transportation for people going nowhere.

And with this honest, visceral reality, director Ramin Bahrani has created the most potent political advertisement of 2008 with the instantaneously classic, neo-realist “Chop Shop.”  But he’s not didactic nor prone to exposition. There’s not a single soliloquy amongst the multinational chatter. This movie isn’t a crossword puzzle. There’s no time for reflection, even as every pothole retains water and harsh fluorescent streetlights buzz like cicadas. Bahrani, a native North Carolinian, shares a documentary-like style with Ken Loach but is less arch than the mercurial English genius. He reveals this raw world without overt polemics. “Chop Shop” isn’t an indictment; it’s simply the view from the trenches. It’s the lives of the uninsured, the underrepresented, the intolerated. If it makes an audience uneasy, well, that’s because Bahrani invokes a straight-forward but emotionally gripping tone that compels the viewer to experience these lives in the unflinching foreground.

The protagonist is Ale, the plucky, spindly slender young boy who lives in a bare room above a bay in a shop garage. When the metal grated door is locked, he lives with no direct sunlight, only a small, sliding window to open for a view of the bay. He sleeps on a modest twin bed next to an oscillating table fan which has lost its front cover. Dinner is microwaved popcorn. 

But amidst his meager existence, Ale is driven, and works his ass off.  He doesn’t attend school but he’s enrolled in an outsider’s vo-tech, stripping autos, buffing cars, and nicking hubcaps. He sells candy on the subway and Cds in the alley’s taquería line.  He is a feral child with a ferocious appetite to succeed with the limited resources at his disposal.  Diligently responsible, Ale is trusted by his employer to lock himself in at night.  He has plans for a future; in reality when it’s 4:57, his future is 4:58.  

We don’t know what led Ale to this point.  There’s no explanation for the absence of his parents. And we don’t know how he’s gained the trust of his employer. But Bahrani doesn’t have time to coddle us with these incidentals. Instead, he unearths a present with no past and invites us to react to the immediacy of Ale’s existence. Into this life, his sister arrives and soon her choices thrust Ale into an even murkier reality. His life is like his stash of money; even when it’s in a safe place it’s vulnerable.

Alejandro Polanco provides a stupendous performance. As his namesake, he is innocence and guile melded. His face broadcasts both wizened gravity and childlike wonder. There’s nothing precious in his performance or his presentation. Polanco may become a one-hit wonder, but it’s a knockout punch.

“Chop Shop” is an important film — especially timely as a national election affords a country a concrete opportunity to acknowledge and embrace working class issues — which ends ambivalently; dreams scuppered, hopes hopefully reignited. Yet, this isn’t an angry, berating story. The anthem for this picture is not “Oh, say can you seethe?”  It is a more subtle study than this.

Standing on an overlook outside Shea Stadium, Ale and his only child friend, Carlos, find a sliver of a view, a speck of diamond between second base and shortstop. If candidates do not address these marginalized lives they are either dangerously ignorant or oblivious cowards.  And the stumping platitudes that drip from their lips will be as remote to Third World America as flights skimming above the home base of the brave.