Only wrote a brief introduction for this screening as a guest speaker was due to make an appearance. If you'd told me when The Station started screening movies that one night there would have been a full house laughing uproariously at a Ken Loach movie I would have thought you were mental.
‘malt whisky
epitomises the inherent dichotomy of the Scottish psyche – at once passionate
and rational, romantic and ironic, mystical and sceptical, heroic and craven,
full of laughter and despair.’
Charles Maclean, Malt Whisky (1998)
Scottish cinema can generally
be divided into two categories – gritty urban dramas (Trainspotting, Neds) or charming escapism (Local Hero). Ken Loach’s The
Angel’s Share manages to cover both territories with this tale of a young
tearaway who finds redemption through a developing interest in Malt whisky. Robbie
(Paul Brannigan) is a bright lad but never far away from trouble. Unable to
extricate himself from a long-time feud with a local gang and hated by his
pregnant girlfriend’s family he is running out of chances until kindly
community services leader Harry (John Henshaw) takes him under his wing and
introduces him to the pleasures of malt whisky. Loach and Glaswegian writer
Paul Laverty have collaborated on fourteen other films several of which have
been set in Scotland
including Carla’s Song (1994), My Name is Joe (98), and Ae Fond Kiss (2004). Always sympathetic
to the plight of the underprivileged their work together particularly when
dealing with Scots working class life has a great deal of humour present. The Angel’s Share is one of Loach’s
warmest films, avoiding his tendency for didacticism but still managing to pass
social commentary while being extremely entertaining.
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