Film Review
Ken Loach's stirring, startlingly realist portrayal of adolescent
experience in a bleak industrial town rightfully deserves its place in
the top ten of British films. Taking Barry Hines's short novel
A Kestrel for a Knave as a starting
point, Loach and his talented crew of technicians and cast (mostly
non-professional actors) create a devastatingly poignant depiction of a
teenage boy's attempts to rise up the grim realities of a life that is
apparently without hope, compassion or meaning.
Loach began his filmmaking career on the tail-end of the kitchen sink
tradition that had brought gritty realism to British cinema in the mid
to late 1950s. A committed socialist, the director was attracted
to social, economic and humanist themes, and tackled these with great
conviction in his early films. Loach had directed several plays
in the social-realist vein for BBC television and one similarly
uncompromising film,
Poor Cow
(1967), before he made
Kes,
the film that would immediately establish him as one of Britain's
leading filmmakers.
Much of the power of Kes stems from the arresting central performance
from David Bradley, a wiry sixteen-year-old whose only prior acting
experience was in school pantomimes. It is Bradley's truthful
depiction of a brutalised teenager which makes the film so real and
moving. The understated sequences in which his character rears
the kestrel and makes him his one true friend are amongst the most
poignant of any British film. Like most non-professionals,
Bradley doesn't act the part, he
becomes
the part, and this makes it extraordinarily easy for the viewer to
identify with his character. If the film's ending doesn't make
you feel like you've just been kicked head-first down a mineshaft, you
must have watched the entire film with your eyes closed.
But it isn't all gloom and tears. There's a surprising amount of
humour in this film. The sequence in which the P.E. teacher
(Brian Glover in his film debut) attempts to live out his Bobby
Charlton fantasy - playing both striker and referee to ensure a result
- is as sidesplitting as it is true to life. In fact, most of the
teachers are portrayed unsympathetically in this film. They look
more like hardened warders in a prison than educational professionals,
brutalising their young charges and failing to instil in them any sense
of self-esteem or hope. Only one teacher appears to understand
what his job is about, the sympathetic Mr. Farthing, played by Colin
Welland (the only professional actor in the cast and future
screenwriter of
Chariots of Fire).
The scene in which Farthing allows Billy to talk to the class about his
kestrel-rearing hobby is the most important in the film and is one that
should be compulsory viewing on any teacher training course.
Kes is an extraordinary film,
beautifully composed and searing in its realist humanity. It is
often compared with François Truffaut's
Les 400 coups (1959), another
memorable depiction of adolescent rebellion in an unsympathetic adult
world. Both films are what the French term a
cri de coeur, a heartfelt appeal
for adults not to write off the next generation and condemn them to a
future without meaning, but rather to take the time and the effort to
instil in youngsters a sense of self-worth and desire to make something
of their lives. Forty years since its was first seen,
Kes has lost none of its power to
move an audience and remains one of the most inspired and inspirational
films of the Twentieth Century.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Ken Loach film:
Riff-Raff (1991)
Film Synopsis
Billy Casper is a solitary teenager living in a glum Yorkshire mining
town. Bullied at school and abused at home by his older
brother Jud, he rebels through small acts of juvenile delinquency that
strain his relationship with his mother. Billy is adamant that he
will not end up working down the coalpit like his brother, but life
appears to offer him no alternative. He has difficulty reading
and cannot wait to leave school. His future prospects are no less
bleak than his present predicament. Then, one day, he decides to
adopt a kestrel fledgling that he finds on a farm near to where he
lives. From a book he has stolen from a second-hand bookshop,
Billy learns how to nurture the bird and train it. For the first
time, Billy finds a sense of purpose and fulfilment in his life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.