Tuesday Minute
No. 153 | September 7, 2010
Our theme this week
Actors who have directed one film only
Featured this week (theme introduction)
Monday — Marlon Brando: One-Eyed Jacks (1961)
Nil by Mouth is a raw, personal, powerful look at working-class life on the south side of London. Gary Oldman wrote and directed the film, and it’s hard to say how much of his childhood growing up in public housing made it onto the screen, but it’s a relief to know he survived. Oldman dedicated the movie to the memory of his father.
The father in the film is a desperate and brutal man named Ray, played by Ray Winstone. The victim of much of Ray’s abuse is his wife, Valerie, a role for which Kathy Burke won Best Actress at Cannes. Their young daughter, Michelle, is utterly neglected, not even a concern for the parents, as she witnesses endless streams of profanity and shocking violence. Billy (Charlie Creed-Miles) is Valerie’s brother, who robs them to feed his drug habit, which leads Ray to seek retribution. The cycle goes on. The rage within the family hits a boiling point, with Valerie ending up in the hospital, Ray beaten and semi-conscious in a parking lot, and Billy in jail.
It ain’t a pretty story, but it feels real, too real at times. Nil by Mouth is like a documentary. We may not be entertained, in the usual sense of the word, but we get a view of life we don’t get to see very often: humans living in desperate circumstances, doing desperate things, and like the best of movies, it’s not about them, it’s about us.
…58…59…60.

Categories
Tag Cloud
Blog RSS
Comments RSS
Last 50 Posts
Back
Back
Void « Default
Life
Earth
Wind
Water
Fire
Light 