Ken Loach's las film "Looking for Eric" is one of the best of his long career.
First, it is entertaining. The plot evolves around a Manchester United football fanatic, Eric Bishop, who is living with two youngsters from his former marriage, his stepsons. Eric is fragile and unhappy with his life so he wants to commit suicide, but he finds support in his friends (football supporters like him) and workmates (in the post office) to overcome the difficulties he finds, specially when dealing with his eldest son's criminal environment. Fighting to overcome problems makes him a better man and more couragous, too.
Memorable is the scene with his grandson as he meets his first ex-wife
whom he still loves. Interesting is the way the director Ken Loach
emulates Woody Allen's technique in merging reality and imagination in
a sort of magical realism series of scenes between the protagonist's
hero (the footballer Eric Cantona) and himself in a mock psychonalityic
relationship between shrink and patient, which brings about most of his
confidence to face a new and better life.
Secondly, the narrative is full of surprises as Eric moves from depression to heroism once he is able to face love and responsibility towards his sons. Therefore, there is at the same time a story about personal growth, a love story, a story about parenthood and adolescents, a story about friendship and the power of the group against the weakness of the individual, and, last but not least, a story of gangsters and crime which evidences that the British police do not play with dolls when fighting crime.
Finally, Paul Laverty, the scriptwriter, and the actors Steve Evets, Eric Cantona, Stephanie Bishop, etc. do a wonderful job. The film is appropriate for the many clues to British cultuture that is brings to us in OV (UGC and Albatros): the accent, the types, the popular culture around football matches, the police, the low-class youth, etc. A highly recommended funny film and a great comedy whose values are progressive to the root!
"He who is afraid to throw the dice will never throw a six" says Cantona when he is teaching Eric. That is the moral behind the film: he who does not take risks is already dead.
Showing posts with label film cinema agenda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film cinema agenda. Show all posts
Sunday, 13 December 2009
Tuesday, 7 April 2009
Jim Jarmusch, at the Film Institute

This week, the Film Institute is showing Dead Man, an anti-western, by Jim Jarmusch, an American independent filmmaker and script writer, whose films are admired by some of us because of his original approach. Stranger Than Paradise and Down by Law are some of his early films. Jarmusch worked as an assistant to director Nicholas Ray. Through Ray's efforts, he became a production assistant on Wim Wenders' documentary, "Lightning Over Water" (1980). Read more at the wikipedia.
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film cinema agenda
Tuesday, 10 March 2009
The Valencian Filmoteque (now “Instituto Valenciano de Cinematografía Ricardo Muñoz Suay”) was created in 1985. The IVAC concentrates everything related to cinema and film for it preserves, restores, catalogues and makes known our cultural and film heritage on the one hand, and, on the other, it promotes, produces and trains audiovisual and film professionals, as it is responsible for the grants and subsidies to the Valencian audiovisual sector.
Labels:
film cinema agenda
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