Film Review
Choose a life. Choose a job. Choose
a family. Choose a future... Danny Boyle's follow-up to his highly original debut
feature
Shallow Grave (1994)
was destined to be one of the most talked about British films of the
decade, not surprisingly as it dealt with that most controversial of
subjects: drug addiction. Whilst
Trainspotting was condemned in some
quarters for its perceived glorification of the hedonistic drugs
lifestyle, it was generally well-received by the critics and soon came
to be regarded as one of the most important films in British
cinema. The film was made on a shoestring budget of 2.5 million
dollars, but it took around 72 million dollars worldwide at the box
office, making it the most successful British film of the year.
Trainspotting provided a welcome
shot in the arm for the British film industry, just when it needed it
most.
Screenwriter John Hodge and director Danny Boyle took Irvine Welsh's
novel of the same title and turned it into the most vibrant cinematic
trip of the decade, a heady mix of black comedy, urban realism and pop
culture that is as hilarious as it is harrowing. Far from
promoting the taking of drugs (as some of its detractors have claimed),
Trainspotting offers a
brutally uncompromising account of how drugs can really screw up your
life, and makes the alternative - an uneventful little life with a job,
a family and a crippling mortgage - appear infinitely more
attractive. The experiences of the main character Mark Renton
(Ewan McGregor at his absolute best) are like something out of
The Exorcist, a gruelling dark
fantasy whose surreal highlights include diving head-first into the
filthiest public toilet in Edinburgh and being attacked by a zombie
baby that can crawl on ceilings. Renton is not the most
sympathetic of protagonists (he survives by haplessly bringing
destruction to everyone around him, killing his friendships to save
himself) but we're with him every inch of the way as he tries to escape
from his personal Hell, battling against predatory teenagers,
psychopathic bullies and a pal with a seriously scary Sean Connery
fixation as he does so.
Trainspotting is a world apart
from the kind of grim social realist drama that is perhaps more
naturally suited to its depressing cocktail of urban deprivation, youth
alienation and drugs addiction. Whilst the film never lets us
forget the bleakness of its subject matter, its approach is startlingly
vibrant, packed with colour, humour and vitality - watching it is like
being hit by a massive rush of adrenalin. The relentlessly upbeat
tone of the film brings a horrifying edge to some of its more shocking
scenes (a baby lying dead in its cot through neglect, a pal dying alone
and in squalor from an HIV illness, the main character's chilling
near-death experience), and it thrusts shards of the cruellest irony
into its attempt at constructing a happy ending from the mountain of
human misery that precedes it.
Trainspotting is shamelessly
provocative throughout, both in what it shows and how it shows
it. Whilst its approach is light-hearted (in a darkly twisted,
vomit-inducing kind of way) it doesn't flinch from shoving our noses
into the sordid realities of life as experienced by those who end up
stoned and desperate on the social scrap heap. Having dragged us
to the abyss and shown the harm that hard drugs do to individuals and
society in general, the film ends on a note of wry optimism - it
is possible to break out of the
cycle of hit and craving, although not everyone is able to make The
Choice.
Trainspotting
is not only one of the most compelling and stunningly original British
films of the 1990s, it is also one of the most socially relevant.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Mark Renton is a streetwise Edinburgh lad who chooses drug addiction
over an ordinary humdrum life. Not for him the spirit-sapping
routine afforded by a job and a normal family life. He and his
best mates - Sick Boy and Spud - see no future for themselves and
seek escape through the needle of a syringe. When Mark tries to
give up drugs, he craves another kind of fix, and ends up in bed with a
fifteen-year-old girl, who threatens to report him to the police if he
stops seeing her. Another of his friends, Tommy, turns to hard
drugs when Mark inadvertently ruins his life by stealing a personal
pornographic video. After being arrested for shoplifting, Mark
agrees to submit himself to a drugs rehabilitation programme. The
craving for hard drugs is more than he can bear and a short time later
Mark is an inch away from death when his bloodstream is hit by a
near-lethal mix of methadone and heroin. When Mark finally
manages to kick the drugs habit, he learns that Tommy is a full-blown
addict and is HIV positive. Disillusioned with his old life, Mark
moves to London, where he finds work as an estate agent. Just
when he feels he has turned over a new leaf, his old friends show up
and force him to come in on a potentially lucrative drugs deal.
Escape is harder than it seems...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.