Country: UK
What is wrong with British Cinema? Nick Love, Outlaw and er... Danny Dyer.
“‘ee’s a facking nonce now put ‘im dahn!”
For my sins, I’m somehow drawn to
write on the rather horrible but somewhat fascinating Outlaw. This is for two reasons. Firstly, it sits well outside the
remit of Videotape Swapshop. Secondly, in conversation with the author of this
fine film site, I was asked how I managed to live (and work) in London. I began to think
about the cinematic representation of life in England’s capital – all the more
relevant, I guess, with the current overwhelming and ongoing public image
exercise at hand in the city with this summer’s Olympic Games preparations. Once
upon a time, we had Mike Leigh to paint the picture of life in England, and often of life in and around London. It usually
involved familial disputes over mismatching tea cups and Hygena kitchen sinks,
and usually, intentionally, stretched no further than the semi detached
landscape of the suburbs. Then, from the steaming afterbirth of the artful (Madonna)
dodger Guy Ritchie and his pop grot hooliganism, Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998), emerged Nick Love.
Love followed the mandate for over stylised cockney gangsterism and very briefly set London in conflagration in very much the same way a carelessly discarded pie might have done one day in Pudding Lane. The rest, potentially, is a horrible history. If we sidestep the equally awful The Football Factory (2004) for a moment, we should skip straight to the “themes” at play in Outlaw. All shelter under an overarching umbrella of vigilantism. Outlaw’s central concern is to describe the extent to which ordinary, but disaffected, folk are pushed before taking the law into their own hands. There’s some clumsy commentary on class distinction, or rather a lack thereof. Most of the Outlaws are upwardly mobile, though disaffected nonetheless. There’s the soon to be married City Boy living in a fancifully sterile Canary Wharf area duplex apartment and the Barbour Jacket wearing, to the manor born, son of a former Major, who has been left hideously scarred following a brutal assault. There’s even (gasp!) a black barrister, driven around by a servile Bob Hoskins, whilst dealing with underworld scum.
Tie-ing this unlikely gang of
moral bandits together is Sean Bean, a (predictably) disaffected soldier
returning back to grey-hued Blighty from service in Iraq, who is made to utter
“it’s worse here than over there”. Bean is all too clearly unhinged, but his Daily Mail inspired rants of Britain
letting “decent folk” down, shamelessly resonate with the rag tag ensemble and
the resulting acts of violence against violence lead to another
painfully telegraphed twist: the public begin to view them as grim anti-heroes. The
desperate act of taking the law into one’s own hands is given a broad coating
of dramatic nonsense that takes in a spot of police corruption, the Robin Hood
myth and a liberal seasoning of the traditional Revenge mechanic. As the
film develops, the moral viewpoint shifts from Bean’s perspective to that of
Danny Dyer in the role of City Boy Gene. In what can only be assumed to be a
hazy stab at social dilemma – specifically The Public Good Game, Dyer elects to
leave his comfortable life behind and carve out a new career in roughing up the
bad guys for an intended greater good.
Love followed the mandate for over stylised cockney gangsterism and very briefly set London in conflagration in very much the same way a carelessly discarded pie might have done one day in Pudding Lane. The rest, potentially, is a horrible history. If we sidestep the equally awful The Football Factory (2004) for a moment, we should skip straight to the “themes” at play in Outlaw. All shelter under an overarching umbrella of vigilantism. Outlaw’s central concern is to describe the extent to which ordinary, but disaffected, folk are pushed before taking the law into their own hands. There’s some clumsy commentary on class distinction, or rather a lack thereof. Most of the Outlaws are upwardly mobile, though disaffected nonetheless. There’s the soon to be married City Boy living in a fancifully sterile Canary Wharf area duplex apartment and the Barbour Jacket wearing, to the manor born, son of a former Major, who has been left hideously scarred following a brutal assault. There’s even (gasp!) a black barrister, driven around by a servile Bob Hoskins, whilst dealing with underworld scum.
No discussion of Nick Love should
go without his regular partner in crime – Dire Danny. The pair have held hands since Goodbye Charlie Bright (2001). I share
some similarities with Dyer. We are of the same age, grew up in the same areas
and are, to my distaste, physically similar. Thankfully there are some
differences too. To date, I have not presented The Real Football Factory and to the best of my knowledge, I
refrain from staring off at an angle, whilst pouting, when trying to convey
that I am in thought. This
“Dire” trait goes some way in explaining the actor’s deficiencies; one’s
amplified in Outlaw’s attempt to deal
with inner conflict. Whilst it would be easy to
refer to Dyer’s acting as a source for “what’s wrong with Outlaw”, it’s more
useful to comment on Love’s habit for indulging in self harm in his casting
because, 6th Form Drama Assignment script aside, the director
insists on using the non-actor in roles that embarrassingly outweigh his actual
ability.
Now, to those who may cry Bob
Hoskins in the film’s defense (if these people actually exist), I respond with The Long Good Friday (1980) which, discounting
the nostalgic coo-ing, is an equally Made for TV-esque affair and criminally
lacks in terms of its performances. That Bob Hoskins agreed to the project is
both of no surprise (Super Mario Brothers, anyone?) and a horribly misguided
sense of National Duty. To those who fly in to London
this summer to watch sweaty men and women prance around the horribly,
previously, neglected locale of Stratford
in the miserable Borough of Newham, Outlaw
remains a worrying postcard possibility. As the government suit up and ready
themselves to intimidate anyone thinking of a repeat performance of last years
riots, the geezer-ish potential for Love’s London to win out like a fixed Mayoral
election remains a distinct possibility. Perhaps that is what I find most
offensive after all.
Watch Outlaw, and move to Surrey!
© Mike Commane 2012
© Mike Commane 2012
Many thanks to Mike for contributing a second excellent guest review for The Celluloid Highway, and for a film that almost certainly would never have made it onto the site were it not for him. If you enjoyed reading this as much as I, then please head on over to Videotape Swapshop for more of the same.
You see, this is exactly what i`m talking about: laughable, pathetic, out-moded, offensive, talentless, pointless, idiotic, objectionable, absurd, foul-mouthed, embarrassing, irritating, unimaginative, nauseating, unwatchable hog-wash that would`ve shamed The Childrens Film Foundation 45 years ago. Watching a truly great film like "The Creeping Flesh" really makes me even more angry about the way the British film industry has gone down the toilet in the last 35 years.
ReplyDelete