Kes, 1969
In
the poor, working class coal mining town of Barnsley, an adolescent
boy named Billy (David Bradley) sharing a cramped bed with his older
brother Jud (Freddie Fletcher) is jarred awake by the sound of his
Jud's alarm clock. Prodding his soporific brother to rise, he seizes
the opportunity to comfortably stretch out on the narrow bed for
his last few minutes of sleep as Jud dresses to go to work. A mediocre
and ambitionless student, Billy seems destined to follow in the footsteps
of his older brother and work in the drudgery of the pit, an empty
and dead-end prospect that he adamantly and vociferously rejects,
even as he is unable to articulate his own plans for the future beyond
his desire to leave school. His part-time job delivering newspapers
before the start of the school morning assembly for a local store
equally proves equally uncertain, having been caught stealing in
the past by the shopkeeper, and habitually arriving late to work
after Jud invariably steals his bicycle to ride to the mines after
a late start. Neglected and often abandoned at home by his selfish
and convivial mother (Lynne Perrie) as she entertains her latest
paramour at a local pub, the aimless and trouble-prone Billy nevertheless
stumbles into a constructive avocation when one day, he spots a kestrel's
nest near the woods. Intrigued by a conversation with a receptive
neighbor on the challenge and skill of falconry, he steals a young
kestrel from the nest and embarks on a focused and disciplined regimen
to train the graceful wild bird.
Based on the Barry Hines novel A
Kestrel for a Knave, Kes is
a direct, unsentimental, and provocative portrait of poverty, marginalization,
apathy, and despair. Ken Loach's
unobtrusive cinema vérité-styled filmmaking and non-professional
casting create a documentary fiction that integrates organic and
unflinching realism within the narrative framework of a drama. Loach's
presentation of the dispiriting, stringently imposed regimentation
of institutional public education that is carried over in the rampant
neglect and abusive relationships within Billy's family reflects
the psychologically (and emotionally) ingrained cycle and entrenchment
of violence and cruelty that metastasizes from personal failure,
social impotence, and pervasive hopelessness: Jud's self-affirming
declaration of contentment with his life despite his repeated (and
deliberate) inebriation and carousing after work; the mother's expressed
concern for the welfare of her children that, hypocritically, takes
place in the pub after she leaves Billy alone for the evening; the
failed athlete-turned-physical education teacher, Mr. Sugden (Brian
Glover) who concocts World Cup scenarios during football games and
punishes students who do not enable his immature fantasy; the stern
headmaster Mr. Gryce (Bob Bowes) whose arbitrarily enforced disciplinary
actions serve more as a means to re-assert authority than to uncover
truth and root out culpability. Contrasting the desolation and spiritual
poverty of Billy's oppressively confining environment against his
liberating, almost meditative ritual of kestrel training in the open
field, Loach creates a sublimely transitory, yet indelible image
of natural communion, existential purpose, and transcendence.
© Acquarello 2003. All rights reserved.
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