☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
Sweet
Sixteen (2002) – K. Loach
Ken Loach makes social realist films, similar
to the Dardennes Brothers from Belgium, but he has been at it for a lot longer
(his 1969 film, Kes, is a real tearjerker about a poor boy whose falcon becomes
the only thing that makes life worth living).
Jonathan Rosenbaum refers to these films as “social deterministic” and I
suppose they do point to poverty and its ill effects as causal factors – or at
least constraints – that lead to all the sad and bad outcomes that his
characters face. In Sweet Sixteen,
newcomer Martin Compston plays Liam, a teen with an unstable family life in
Greenock, Scotland (subtitles are required).
His mum is in prison and her boyfriend is a vicious drug dealer aided by
Liam’s own grand-dad. His sister is
estranged from the family and is a single teen mum herself. After a row, Liam leaves to join his sis and
optimistically plans a future where he can live with his mum in a caravan
overlooking the scenic River Clyde. This
takes money so he and a friend steal drugs (from his mum’s boyfriend) and begin
dealing, eventually catching the eye of the local drug kingpin, who signs them
up for bigger things. Compston’s
portrayal of Liam is exhilarating – he is full of energy and laughter and
basically fearless, getting into a lot of scrapes and earning a few hard
knocks. However, despite his optimism
and positivity about the future, we know that this is not the kind of
enterprise that leads to good things and this is not the sort of movie where
things work out. Loach (and screenwriter
Paul Laverty, who also co-wrote Loach’s most recent hit, I Daniel Blake, 2016)
has a different message to convey. But
he does it with a true affection for his characters and sympathy for their
plight and their often fruitless and frustrated attempts to deal with it.
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