AMERICAN
CINEMA PAPERS
PRINT ARCHIVE
1996
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KILTSPOTTING:
HIGHLAND REELS
by
Harlan Kennedy
When Mel Gibson
stands there holding the Best Picture and Best Director Oscars as an honorary
Scotsman, something startling is happening in world culture. We're acclaiming
the moment when Aussie americanus went to the Highlands
to paint his face blue, declare war on Limeyland,
and bequeath the ultimate footnote to movie martyrology.
Where Brando in One Eyed Jacks, Douglas in Spartacus,
and Penn in Dead Man Walking were content merely to be flogged,
crucified, or injected, Gibson's William Wallace was hanged and drawn and
quartered--buy one death, get two free--right there in front of the
popcorn-chewing populace.
This has not been
the only mid-Nineties movie exercise in self-mortification transpiring in Caledonia
lately. Scotland
is becoming the flavor of the zeitgeist. From Rob Roy, Braveheart, and the retro-whimsical Loch Ness
it is a small but quantum leap to Danny Boyd's Shallow Grave
successor, Trainspotting, and Gillies MacKinnon's Small Faces. Scotland's soul
is being bared by her native helmers with
increasing wit and mordancy, even as the rest of the filmmaking world sees
the land as a place to combine epochal agony with fancy costumes and bankable
stars.
MacKinnon's tangy
Glasgow bildungsroman, which won Best
British Film prize at latest Edinburgh Film Festival, and Boyle's seething
new comedy of hard drugs and "trainspotters"--slang
for the clubby macho subculture of listmakers and
memorizers (like Quentin McTarantino)--were clearly
not made with the leftover stock footage handed back to the Scottish Tourist
Board after the Neeson-Gibson-Danson pix. No scenic
goats prance over heathered hills. No blue
capacious skies ring to Dolbyized bagpipes.
At the same time
there are striking assonances between those mass-appeal history 'n' folklore
movies and the tarter Tartanism of Boyle and
MacKinnon. Scots and other skeptics may scoff at Braveheart,
pronouncing it Mad Max 4: Woad
Warrior. And they will query its wilder historical freedoms, such as the
defenestration of gay royal boyfriends, the kilt-lifted "mooning"
at enemy armies, or the romance between a Franco-English envoy-princess and
Scottish hero. But Trainspotting and Small
Faces prove that Braveheart, mixing a
dram of surreal farce into its tragedy, got the spirit right if not the
letter. So did much of Rob Roy with its determined, at times demented,
playoff between southern foppishness (Tim Roth as drawling English
milquetoast) and Scottish-Euripidean grandeur
(Jessica Lange as a Highland
Medea). Modern Scottish cinema--much of the land's
modern artistic sensibility--is about surrealism as a higher reality.
Dispossession is played out as black comedy; romance is skittishly ephemeral;
and survival, especially as seen from the perspective of this 250th
anniversary year of the Battle of Culloden, when the English ground their
final foot into Scottish independence hopes, is a gutsy, anything-goes
synthesis of fight and flight.
The concept of
devolution from nasty old England
is now so ancient-historical that many of today's Scots see it as a sore
scabbed over with seriocomic ritualism. Yes, nationalistic discontents must
be aired. But no, Scotland
won't have its independence today or tomorrow or the day after. Meanwhile, a
quarter-millennium after Culloden and three-quarters of a millennium after
William Wallace, a vassal nation filling up with anti-Conservative socialist
voters gets treated by the punitive English as an offshore social science
laboratory. ("Let's try our new poll tax there first!" cried
Margaret Thatcher. And she did.)
England
no doubt wonders what else it can do with its delinquent nephew and his urban
flagships. Glasgow,
when not flaunting higher aspirations as Europe's
Capital of Culture (its title a few wears ago), offers an alternative
self-portrait as a hive of crime, violence, and gang warfare: a sort of Belfast
without religion-and-politics. And Edinburgh,
oft dubbed the Athens
of the North, says "Ya boo" to the
arts-and-letters carpetbaggers by becoming also the drugs and dirty-needle
AIDS capital of the North.
Though few of these
larger cultural-political suppurations are explicit in Trainspotting
or Small Faces, they surely help to energize the sense of a large and
vibrant existential distemper; of orphaned street lives striving for their
self-enfranchisement, however brief or adventitious, from parent surrogates
or imposed social commandments. Where recent English cinema dealing with
lower-depths subjects has conveyed cramped lives through lovingly downbeat
styles--Terence Davies's mod-Rembrandt nostalgism,
Mike Leigh's Beckettian nihilism, the humane docu-comedies of Loach's Riff
Raff or Raining Stones--Boyle and MacKinnon brandish an airy, hyperreal contemporaneity
that's part Glasgow School of Painting, part offshoot of the free-swearing,
vernacular-rich New Scottish Novel, where excitement derives from the
perpetual possibility of narrative and character derailment.
We know the Boyle
movie gestalt already from Shallow Grave. Give three ill-matched
characters a common habitat and purpose, then sit back to watch sanity and
harmony unravel in a crescendo of surrealism and splintering viewpoints. Trainspotting is also about a band falling apart.
Three heroin addicts take turns at attempting to kick the habit, but only kickstart the others into re-succumbing. It's a farce
about an endless loop. Yet like Shallow Grave it defies nihilism with
a kind of evangelistic hallucinophilia: you can
take away everything but our fantasy lives.
The blackened,
feces-smeared public toilet cubicle visited in an early scene by protagonist
Mark (Ewan McGregor) becomes the gateway, or bowlway, to an underwater paradise as he dives in head-first
to swim through oneiric depths of blue water--all
to recover two heroin suppositories he has just noisily evacuated in the
first of the film's drug frightmares. After that,
Boyle's fist-in-the-face surrealism moves so far from the tender touch of most
contemporary-life movies made south of the border--or across the sea in Ireland,
where there is almost no mean between agitprop realism (Nothing Personal)
and fabulist elegy (The Crying Game)--that Trainspotting
deserves some award for giving fully realized shape to a set of long-nascent
Scottish idiosyncrasies. The hints of impish caricature detectable in the
work of Bill Forsyth, or even the more ludic
moments of Bill Douglas, are here made explicit, outlandish, messianic.
As in Shallow
Grave, Boyle seems to choose his supporting players for their faces and
for how picturesquely those "phizzes"
bulge in wide-angle shots. Like Christopher Eccleston's
nerdic-macabre presence as Grave's
accountant turned attic dweller, in Trainspotting
Ewen Bremner's bony-faced,
rubber-limbed Spud (a fairground-mirror version of Uriah
Heep) or Alex Carlyle's mad-eyed, stark-mustached Begbie, the band's resident psychotic, seem transformed already
by the grossed-out imagination of a heroin junkie. And the baby who dies from
neglect in a corner of their drug commune later returns, gothically
transfigured, as a spidery horrorchild with Exorcist-style
revolving head who crawls across Mark's bedroom ceiling during his withdrawal
delirium.
Boyle and writer
John Hodge never characterize their story or their characters' dilemma as
exclusively "Scottish." Drug addiction, after all, is a global
franchise, and so are petty crime, troubled love lives, and attempts by
mixed-up youngsters to start life afresh. Yet national context still serves
important functions here. In the specific case of Sick Boy (Johnny Miller),
the most garrulous character, it adds geo-comical point and poignancy to his
obsessions. He's the chief trainspotter, with his
encyclopedic riffs on the career and charisma of Sean Connery. Connery being Scotland's
only superstar, what more apt than for a Glasgow
junkie high on movie junk to get off on earnest comparisons between Dr. No
and Thunderball. This is siege-warfare
iconolatry. Whom can the sassernachs
produce, Sick Boy would no doubt argue, to equal this screen Celt's impact on
late-century pop heroism?
A broader
nationalist reverberance is provided by the plot's
shuttling between Glasgow
and London.
When Mark flees Scotland to set up as an estate agent, his south-of-the-border
hideaway is broken into by his pursuing pals, one after the other, as if the
film were determined to wage comic war on the yuppie inauthenticity
of its hero's new bolt-hole. Mark's life and flat both crumble into chaos,
until Serious Matters (a friend's funeral) summon him back to his rightful
home.
Only once in the
movie is a larger political perspective made explicit. It happens on the
single occasion that the main characters swap their interchangeable urban
hell for a Scottish Heritage backdrop. The walk they have already begun into
the green and heather-mottled hills is aborted when Mark, asked by one of the
friends if the scenery doesn't make him "proud to be Scottish,"
delivers this broadside: "I hate being Scottish. We're the lowest of the
fucking low, the scum of the earth, the most wretched, servile, miserable,
pathetic trash that was ever shat into civilization. Some people hate the
English, but I don't. The English are wankers. We,
on the other hand, are colonized by wankers. We can't
even choose a decent race to be colonized by. We are ruled by effete arseholes."
The blank look this
speech gets from Mark's pals undercuts its potential solemnity and also
avoids "signposting" the subtle point that it is less the English
themselves that some Scots resent, more their own acquiescence in English
dominance. The non-sequitur isolation of this scene also makes sure we
understand that while Anglo-Scottish tensions might underlie Trainspotting's
story, they lie so far under that like a seismic fault they aren't felt until
they produce the occasional, seemingly irrational cataclysm.
Small Faces is
set in Glasgow
in 1968, but like Trainspotting its take on Scotland
and the Scottish character seems ur-Nineties.
Without opting for seat-shaking surrealism Danny Boyle-style, it delights in absurdism and short-circuited logic. In an early plot
incident, our 14-year-old hero Lex (Ian Robertson)
fires an airgun across a park at Malky, the leader of a rival gang. When Lex is later told that the bullet hit him in the eye, he
does not even bother to ask if it blinded him. In most films this would seem lèse-probabilité, since Lex's
own life might depend on the answer. But in MacKinnon's movie as in Boyle's,
time wipes out time as if in a cartoon, and cause-and-effect naturalism went thataway. We suspect that Malky
either has instantly recovered or has been wiped off the map, as properly
befits a minor character.
People die deaths in
sudden or impiously bizarre circumstances. In the Edinburgh-set Trainspotting the only member of the inner circle
to die (baby apart) succumbs not to AIDS or drugs but to the obscure ailment
"toxo-plasmosis," caused by cat feces in
his flat. The two key deaths in the Glasgow
pic are equally loopy and outlandish. One takes
place on an ice rink: the out-of-nowhere killing of Lex's
older brother, crowned with a Hitchcock-style visual flourish as the body is
dragged off the ice leaving a bright, straight ribbon of blood. The other,
later demise is (the non-blinded) Malky's. Waking
up with a hangover in a gas-filled room--courtesy of enemy sabotage--he
staggers to the source, turns it off, and then, without even opening a door
or window, calmly lights a cigarette. Adieu Malky; adieu dull plausibility.
MacKinnon (who
seemed a skilled but more ordinary director on his non-Scottish movies, The
Playboys and A Simple Twist of Fate) and his brother Billy (script
editor on The Piano) wrote the script from their own memories of a Glasgow
childhood. The often low-angle camera, as if craning up at adult reality, is Small
Faces' own, more innocent variant on the floor-level camerawork of many
scenes in Trainspotting: where the
perspective is not from childlike inexperience but from a carpet strewn with
spoons, sinister chemicals, and hypodermics.
Yet both movies use
emotional pixilation as style. As the MacKinnons'
plot tours through gang warfare, love rivalry, and long-suffering parenting
(Clare Higgins as single Mum), it registers an all-accepting, even
all-delighting incomprehension at life's mysteries and contradictions. Far
from accepting serf status, culturally or spiritually, this Scotland
defies its provincial role within the British
Isles by reaching out to mysterious
connections with far-flung countries. "Tongland"
is the Fu Manchu-ish name of the towering, ugly
housing estate, lapped by mud wastes, where the enemy Glasgow gang lives. And
Lex's own gangleader, a
strutting dandy called Sloan, has a private passion for the paintings of
Austrian expressionist Egon Schiele.
Schiele's swirly,
infernal nudes and vivid, stricken faces seem right at home in the Scotland
of MacKinnon and Boyle, a land trying to burst at the realist seams. Schiele is also close kin to modern Scottish painters
exploring the interface between realism and the grotesque, like Peter Howson and Stephen Campbell, whose mission to make
purgatorial comedy out of the quotidian could be seen as a template for the
New Scottish Cinema.
There are other
distinctive chimings between modern film and modern
culture north of the border. Small Faces and (even more) Trainspotting have the fast-footed, innovative
freshness--episodic stories, free-association syntax, profane language--of a
key Scottish writer like James Kelman, whose 1994
Booker Prize-winning How late it was, how late uses a colloquially cataracting style to narrate the thought sequences of a
blind down-and-out trying to make it from police custody, where he lost his
sight, out into the tragicomic maze of a new world. The book is an epic of
the "transformed mundane" worthy of Joyce. Yet it's also
quintessentially Scottish in mood and momentum, less closet-mystical than the
same story would be in Wales
or Ireland,
more flighty, cantankerous, and derisive than it would be either there or in England.
Likewise Trainspotting the movie's hiccupy,
unholy grace notes owe much to the style of Trainspotting
the book's author, Irvine
Welsh. Where Welsh on the page offers every literary and typographical trick
from freely varied print sizes to verse-style half-lines to explosions of
untranslatable Scottish dialect, Boyle and cameraman Brian Tufano flaunt a gleeful repertoire of frozen frames,
card-shuffling montage sequences, queasy false perspectives, and fantastical
visual punctuation. In one drug-taking sequence, Mark sinks through the
red-carpeted floor and the image is carried over into the ensuing hospital
scene, where shots are "framed" with a border of red carpet as if
by some absurdist soft-sculpture proscenium arch.
It all seems a long
way from Braveheart, let alone Rob Roy,
let alone Loch Ness. Yet is the fast-track whimsy of Trainspotting, offering its own monsters of the
deep who seem as interested in play as in terror, different in kind or merely
in degree and subversive energy from the rollercoaster reality/fantasy disportings of Nessie lore? (If
there is a major criticism one could charge Boyle's film with, it's that it
makes heroin addiction seem too much like heedless, playful,
no-penalty fun.) And is the clan warfare of Small Faces, with its
strutting partisanship and bleakly comical brutality, that different from the
serio-farce of blue-painted Mel Gibson versus King
Patrick McGoohan, or of a cut-out Liam Neeson claymoring a cut-up Tim
Roth into shapes undreamt of by his English tailor?
In addition to their
epoch-friendly hints of postmodernism, Trainspotting
and Small Faces are united by their refusal to moralize. Neither drug
addiction in the first nor gang warfare in the second receives a moment of
author's-message condemnation. We shuttle between an uneditorialized
"How life is" and an equally unmoralistic
"How life seems with a bit of sardonic Celtic vision." The same
motto could be hung above both films: "Abandon sententiousness, all ye
who enter here." This is a quick-witted land with a store of folklore,
amorality, and native defiance: a land that, as in countless Scottish or
Highland-based movie yarns from Brigadoon to Local Hero via I
Know Where I'm Going and Whisky Galore, invites the outsider in to
become either a fast friend or a fast-exposed fool.
Perhaps when
filmmakers take that venturesome leap over Hadrian's
Wall, they really do enter another world.
The dull prose of social realism moves to one side; the false resonances of
an ethical or mystical perspective move to the other. And we are left with a
gleaming through-path into subversion's mischiefs
and surrealism's higher sorcery.
COURTESY T.P.
MOVIE NEWS.
THIS ARTICLE APPEARED IN THE JULY-AUG 1996 ISSUE OF
FILM COMMENT.
©HARLAN KENNEDY. All rights reserved.
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