grcomm
Joined Jan 2005
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grcomm's rating
This is a brilliant political film, one of the finest products of the anti-Thatcher cinema, offering a somewhat unconventional analysis of the class structure of the UK drawing on the work of the great literary critic/historian RAymond Williams and invoking such almost-forgotten examples of working-class cultural phenomena as the workingmen's collective libraries of the late 19th-century. These are juxtaposed with contemporary organizing efforts, mainly led by women in the embattled mining communities of the north. Sorry to make it sound dry and didactic; it's anything but, and the women are stirring to watch. Very intelligent and moving.
Okay, it's not "entertainment" as someone else complained. And I bet Thom Anderson is damned proud of that! On the other hand, if you are interested in film and American society, this is an endlessly absorbing piece of work, sort of a U.S. version of Chris Marker's provocative and witty dissection of the European left released here as "Grin Without a Cat." This is essay film-making at a very high level of intelligence. Anderson's thesis, wildly over simplified, has to do with the way that American filmmakers use the depiction of L.A. to promote a certain vision of urban society, of architectural modernism and of late capitalism. He draws on such a wide range of film clips -- everything from Samuel Fuller and Robert Aldrich to Michael Mann and Roman Polanski to obscure indie films of the 50s and 60s -- that this film will probably never be released on DVD simply because the rights clearances will take forever. I was particularly struck by his remarks on the cynicism of films like "Chinatown" as fueling a sense of social and political powerlessness among audiences and the comparison to some of the terrific Black indie films of the 60s and 70s, particularly Killer of Sheep.
My only real quibble with the film, and it is not inconsiderable, is that it wasn't clear to me -- admittedly on one viewing -- how the two halves fit together either visually or in terms of the ideas.
But what a pleasure it is to see a movie that HAS ideas, and expresses them with wit and savvy.
My only real quibble with the film, and it is not inconsiderable, is that it wasn't clear to me -- admittedly on one viewing -- how the two halves fit together either visually or in terms of the ideas.
But what a pleasure it is to see a movie that HAS ideas, and expresses them with wit and savvy.