Showing posts with label Warrington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warrington. Show all posts

Monday, 1 April 2019

Resurrection Man (1998)

....Or Clockwork Orangeman as it could almost be called.



Resurrection Man is a 1998 film from director Marc Evans that is based on the 1994 novel of the same name by Eoin McNamee. Like that book, McNamee's screenplay takes inspiration from what is arguably the most notorious sequence of killings to occur in Northern Irish history during the Troubles. Between 1975 and 1977, several Catholic men were picked at random during the hours of darkness by an Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) gang known as The Shankill Butchers. The gang earned their name because of the ferocious and brutal way they tortured, mutilated and dispatched victims who were chosen solely for their religion; cleavers, axes and butcher's knives were the tools of their trade (though they weren't above shootings and bombings in their long-running bloody sectarian campaign either) and their ringleader, described by one detective as 'a ruthless, dedicated terrorist with a sadistic streak, regarded by those who knew him well as a psychopath' was one Lenny Murphy. In 1979 eleven of the gang were given 42 life sentences totaling almost 2,000 years for 100 charges including 19 counts of murder. Murphy himself was already in prison on a lesser charge at this point and, as a result, was never convicted of murder. His violent life and sadistic reign of terror came to an end four years later in 1982 however when, pulling up at his girlfriend's home, he was shot twenty-two times by two IRA gunmen.



Centre-stage in this tale is Stuart Townsend as Victor Kelly, our thinly disguised fictional version of Murphy. A naturally good looking man, Townsend brings a degree of dark glamour and kinky, twisted romanticism to the role despite the abhorrent nature of his character, traits which are a world away from the real Murphy who went by the nickname 'Planet of the Apes' on account of his neanderthal looks. What is carried over from fact to fiction however is the theory that Murphy's murderous zeal stemmed from the fact that this great loyalist terrorist had some Catholic blood himself. This appears to stem from the fact that Murphy is a fairly uncommon name amongst Protestants but it is worth saying that is not an unusual one by any means. Whilst Murphy's commitment may well have been driven by suggestions that he himself was the thing he despised the most, a 'Fenian', the film goes one further by depicting his father as an ineffectual and weak-willed man whom many claim to be Catholic. This slur clearly weighs heavily on both Townsend's Kelly and his overbearing mother (played superbly by Brenda Fricker) who each treat the 'man of the house', their father and husband respectively (George Shane), with utter contempt and disdain. Whilst this is clearly a work of fiction and psychological conjecture (Murphy senior was actually a serving member in the UVF) it helps to bolster that other trademark of gangster movies, namely the oedipal nature of the relationship between kingpin son and his beloved mother which stretches all the way back to Cagney's White Heat, a film that the young Kelly is seen to watch in complete awe at one point. Certainly the behaviour of Fricker when Kelly's blonde haired, doe-eyed and pneumatic moll, Heather (Geraldine O'Rawle) comes round is more in keeping with a bitter love rival than a mother simply wanting the best for her child. Freud is further wheeled out in a suggestion of repressed homosexuality too; Kelly mimics oral sex with his pistol as a way to attract the attention of UVF big-hitters, McClure (Sean McGinley) and Darkie (John Hannah), and is shown to lavish much, pseudo-erotic attention on his victims during torture (he's often naked from the waist up too, presumably to spare this peacock's beloved wardrobe any bloodshed); the final deathstroke often coming to resemble a near-ejaculate like bloodletting and a significant release that leaves Kelly near-catotonically spent. It is also revealed that McClure has shown him photographs of 'English boys in bed together'. This revelation comes during a particularly outrageous, drink and drug-fuelled scene that features the pair embracing and almost kissing whilst Jerusalem plays in the Union Jack bedecked backroom of the bar, with McClure wearing an SS cap!  



It's these little moments of loyalist patriotism that actually gives the film it's sense of place. Indeed, what's interesting about Resurrection Man is how, despite its true-life inspiration, it removes itself from much of the Troubles to simply depict instead the story of a serial killer/gangster. Just take a look at the press release blurb that was subsequently used on the DVD release;

'Victor Kelly is a gangster and ruthless murderer - a 'Scarface' for his generation. He is the leader of a gang of killers known as "Resurrection Men" who target victims in a city where boundaries are marked by blood. Victor's cruelty makes him a ghastly local legend, both feared and venerated. On his trail is Ryan, a journalist, fuelled by an obsessive need to discover the truth about the "Resurrection Man" he is unaware of the risk to his own life. "Resurrection Man" is a chilling and controversial film not for the faint-hearted'

I do wonder if this seeming refusal to acknowledge the political situation inherent in the film, both in this blurb and in the film itself (only slurs of 'Taig' and 'Fenian' indicate just what is going on), has something to do with the climate the film was released in; in 1998 a tentative peace process was being delivered in Northern Ireland which eventually came to a greater fruition at the turn of the 21st century. Whatever the reasons, it works to make Resurrection Man a universal film, riffing on notions as wide-ranging as classic gangster or serial killer films, Bonnie and Clyde romance, violence-for-kicks affairs like the aforementioned A Clockwork Orange, and an almost vampiric thirst for blood. Indeed, the scenes of a malevolent, black-clad Townsend stalking the moonlit streets for victims was enough to ensure that he was subsequently cast as Anne Rice's vampire hero Lestat (previously portrayed in cinema by Tom Cruise in Interview with a Vampire) in the 2002 film, Queen of the Damned.  



I first saw Resurrection Man not long after its release, buying it on VHS. I was interested to watch it for a number of reasons; not least my interest in the Troubles, but also my appreciation of actors such as James Nesbitt, who stars here as Ryan, the journalist on Kelly's trail, and who was at the time riding high with his success in ITV's Cold Feet  - this film affording him the opportunity to move away from comedy and light drama play the kind of heavy dramatic role he has subsequently proved just as adept at - and Derek Thompson who, since 1986, is best known for playing Charlie Fairhead in Casualty, but whose career prior to this (at present) thirty-three-year role included several Troubles-related films. Thompson took a break from Casualty, then in it's eleventh year, to play the role of Herbie Ferguson, the detective investigating the brutal murders - the last original role he has played in his career as the past twenty odd years has seen him continue in the role of nurse Fairhead. There's a reunion, of sorts, between him and his old friend Brenda Fricker, who played Megan Roach in the first five years of Casualty, though they share no actual scenes on film together. Amongst the other familiar Irish faces, there's also a fine supporting turn from the great James Ellis as a veteran seen-it-all reporter and mentor to Nesbitt, though sadly he disappears from the film once the action ramps up.



I remember watching Resurrection Man at the time and thinking 'my God, but Belfast is a bleak place', so imagine my surprise when the credits rolled around to reveal that the film had actually been shot on my own doorstep, in Warrington, Liverpool and Manchester! Indeed, plenty of scenes are shot on streets I actually know, including Legh Street in Warrington, which once housed the now demolished grand Victorian bath house that proves central to the film in its latter stages, whilst its exterior is also featured specifically in a scene in which Nesbitt questions some workers from a Chinese takeaway. The location work, aided by some good cinematography (that late 90s look, before digital colour grading took hold) all help to create a grim, desolate sense of place, with the former (so resolutely not being Belfast) helping to give that sense of near-dystopic hinterland that compliments the film's refusal to be too tied down to the reality of the setting.

As you can tell, I like Resurrection Man enough to still keep returning to it twenty-one-years after its release, though it's not a masterpiece by any means. Structurally it's somewhat unsound; what may have worked well on the page struggles to make much of an impact on the screen, specifically the implication that Kelly represents the dark side of Ryan's nature he struggles to keep in check, as evinced by his drunken beating of his wife, the local casualty doctor (Zara Turner) and his overall fascination with Kelly's violence which suggests he does what Ryan can only dream of. Both men even fall for the same woman; O'Rawle's Heather. The issue here being of course that neither man is truly likeable, which can be a stumbling block for some audiences, though Ryan does at least relinquish the grip his demons has on him thanks to his experience of the unrepentant, unreconstructed Kelly and returns to his wife, in reconciliatory mood. Director Marc Evans aims for a sort of Scorsese style in his eclectic use of '70s rock music to score scenes of revelry and violence (infamously, Mud's 'Tiger Feet' is used over the savage kicking of a Catholic in Kelly's local, whilst more satisfyingly, The Walker Brothers' 'No Regrets' plays as Herbie comes to arrest Kelly, with Heather offering her lover her best Bonnie Parker smile) but the freeze frames he often employs during such music-laden sequences are distinctly Guy Ritchie, himself no stranger to the positives of a good magpie-like soundtrack. Viewed at the time, these tricks may seem like stealing but, watched now with some distance between it, it serves as an interesting museum piece of the stylings from the turn of the century British cinema.   



Produced by Andrew Eaton and executive produced by Michael Winterbottom, Resurrection Man is a dark and unprepossessingly dour and dank psychological thriller that some audiences may find hard to stomach. Whilst it's nowhere near as gratuitously violent as any number of grimy American torture-porn horrors you can name that subsequently rose to the surface in the years after its release, it often reviles simply by what is implied or what is *just about* seen or suggested, though the real root of revulsion of course stems from the fact that what you witness is based on actual events.

Monday, 15 February 2016

Out On Blue Six : Viola Beach, RIP

It's been a desperately sad weekend following the news of the tragic deaths of Warrington band Viola Beach - Jack Dakin, Kris Leonard, Tomas Lowe and River Reeves - and their manager Craig Tarry, following a freak road accident in Stockholm, Sweden. Their beautiful promise will now never bear fruit.

RIP lads.



Please help pay tribute to them and get them the critical and commercial acclaim they deserved and would no doubt go on to achieve by downloading the above track here - let's see of we can't get them to number one  


End Transmission


Saturday, 5 December 2015

Portrait of Postlethwaite

I haven't posted any of my art for a looooong time and I thought I'd rectify this with a pencil sketch I did a few years back of the late, great Pete Postlethwaite


Postlethwaite was once described by Steven Spielberg as ''the best actor in the world'', though with typical modesty and great Northern wit, Postlethwaite himself claimed the director had meant to say ''Pete thinks he's the best actor in the world!'' Warrington born and bred, and schooled right here in St Helens, Pos is quite a hero.

Thursday, 30 July 2015

Meeting My Crush!


What a lovely day! Out in Warrington earlier I bumped into Helen Skelton, out with her new baby. I've been a fan of Helen's and fancied her like mad for a long time so naturally I was a bit tongue tied! All I could do was smile, nod and say hello and thankfully she smiled back and said hiya. Pinch me! Haha

I believe Helen's moving to France shortly; her Warrington Wolves rugby playing husband Richie Myler has signed to Catalan Dragons, so this brief meet was probably my only chance!

Tuesday, 14 July 2015

No Head Space



Just been out round Warrington where I saw, to my dismay, closing down notices on one of my favourite stores, Head.

Head, an independent DVD/CD/Vinyl music store, arrived in Warrington in 2013 after HMVm which previously had the store, shut down.

Ridiculously, HMV are returning to Warrington and have set their hearts on regaining their old store from the landlords, meaning Head is on its way out.

Great isn't it? The big corporate made staff redundant and didn't give a toss about their local clientele back in '13 (customers who had to go to Liverpool or Manchester to buy DVDs and CDs) and now, after an indie store has proved their mistake, they waltz back in making (Head) staff redundant all over again. 

If you ask me, this is sad news: Head was far better than HMV anyway.

Read all about it here

My condolences to all the staff at Head, I hope you get work someplace else soon and thanks for all your help and good service

Wednesday, 25 September 2013

3 From Four

As readers may recall, I recently mentioned a new DVD/Music store in Warrington called Head which have some very good three for a tenner bargains from the Film 4 range. This post looks at three films made by Film 4 in the 1980s, at the very start of the life of Channel 4's film arm



My Beautiful Laundrette, 1985

The landmark of 80s British cinema has understandably and perhaps rightfully dated somewhat, serving as a time capsule document of Thatcher's Britain and a keen occasionally earnest essay in race, sexuality, immigration and class.

To use the laundrette analogy, when its on a spin cycle, at its best, My Beautiful Laundrette is an enjoyable and engrossing experience; especially in the characterisation and performances from Saeed Jaffrey  as the wheeler dealer uncle, and an electric Daniel Day-Lewis in what would prove to be the launchpad of his career. It's easy to see why this film put him on his way, he prowls catlike throughout the film and seems instantly iconic, challenging the audience perceptions.


However when it gets sludgy, My Beautiful Laundrette becomes too earnest. Gordon Warnecke has a suitable air of naive innocence with a streak of ambition, but he naturally struggles opposite Day-Lewis and many soapbox scenes seem too overtly stagey and preachy in his wooden delivery. Nevertheless, the film remains notably groundbreaking and iconic in gay cinema.



 Angel, 1982

I've been wanting to watch this one for years, so I guess as a result it was always going to come as an anti climax when you do. Oh well.

Angel, Neil Jordan's debut and the start of his collaboration with leading man Stephen Rea, is nevertheless impressive. As an essay on revenge and the lure of violence as seemingly a solution, but inevitably just a bigger problem, it is quite morbidly fascinating. 

Rea plays the poetic lost soul, a saxophonist who witnesses a double murder,  with a  deterioration that is painfully sombre to behold. First time director Jordan places his acts of revenge and the nature of violence, both his and of the gun toting gangsters working a protection racket, against the back drop of The Troubles in a manner that is never forced or laboured. Indeed politics are never really mentioned, only implied, which further serves to prove just how tenuous a link these criminals actually have to any 'cause'.  It's a uniquely Northern Irish film, inherent in both its lyricism and its grubby blood stained reality. That said though, the opening scenes of the band playing the red neon soaked seedy past its prime dancehall has an air not too dissimilar to early Scorsese and Mean Streets, whilst Rea's drive to find the assassin with the orthopaedic shoes, is quirky enough to befit a Hitchcock. 


Ultimately though the film, whilst interesting, never truly capitalised on the potential of the initial set up and those first scenes. The depressing mood of Rea's descent into being just like those he preys on, is just that; depressing. Credit to Jordan though, it's amazing to think a film this polished was his debut. He would go on to even better things, with Rea this time as a runaway IRA gunman, in The Crying Game




She'll Be Wearing Pink Pyjamas, 1984

This used to regularly appear on Channel 4 in the 80s, being one of its first Film 4 features. I well remember watching it a couple of times with my parents; clearly as liberal pair who didn't bat much of an eyelid to their pre-teen son being exposed to nudity and depictions and talk of sex; though I do remember asking them what a 'period' was after hearing one character say they'd just got theirs - a moment in my life I'd completely forgotten about until rewatching this.

She'll Be Wearing Pink Pyjamas is a small scale, homegrown piece of feminist cinema and ostensibly an ensemble piece concerning a disparate group of women (ages ranging from 30s to 50s) participating in the UK's first all female survivalist/outward bound course in the Lake District. I say ostensibly ensemble because, although the cast is ably filled by capable actresses of the time, this is really Julie Walters show, as befits the brilliant range of work she was beginning to undertake in the 80s. It doesn't particularly help the would be ensemble nature that some of the characterisation for the other women is often so lacking. A case in point, one character gives up and leaves the course the night before the final activity. She returns in the night, revealing she got home and burst into tears. However on the day of the final, she decides she can't do it and doesn't seem that perturbed by her decision. Just like that. It's hardly a great or believable character path, and a few minutes later she decides she can do it anyway. That said, one of the better and most truthful moments in the film comes from that splendid and instantly recognisable actress Janet Henfrey, as she reveals to her newfound friends that she's only ever had sex once in her life. It's tender, heartfelt and poignant and above all it's well played.


It's a very British and 80s film, a real template in what was early Film 4 with a decidedly 80s score from composer John Du Prez. Not that that's always a bad thing, it has a more timeless sweep that befits the beautiful landscapes at times,  but it can be intrusive, with several moments of jarring 'dramatic'/ 'in danger' music for scenes in which characters do little more than fall in shallow water.

Saturday, 21 September 2013

Miranda (2002)



I didn't even know this film existed until last week, which is odd considering its cast and its filming location in Scarborough and the north coast of Yorkshire; places I love.

Basically, I was out in Warrington last week when I spied their old HMV had reopened as 'Head' a new store selling the same kind of things as HMV; DVD's, CD's, Vinyl and some books. This is great, as the only HMV near me nowadays is Liverpool. Slap bang in the middle of the store was a huge 3 for £10 display on Film 4 dvds and needless to say, I snapped a few up, including this one, Miranda.

The plot is described on Letterboxd, thus ~

A librarian begins a passionate affair with a mysterious woman who walks into his library. When she suddenly disappears he travels down to London to search for her only to discover she has three identities - dancer, dominatrix and con-woman. But which one is the real Miranda? 

Doesn't really gran the tone of the film does it? In fact it makes it sound like quite a sleazy sensuous crime movie. Ok, there's sex in the film of course, but it's fun. There's little fun displayed in the general blurb of the film, the DVD cover above (would it hurt to find images of the cast smiling?) or in this frankly appalling poster (which deletes John Simm's leading man status altogether!)



What Miranda actually is, is a quirky little romantic comedy thriller that benefits greatly from its cast. 

Christina Ricci is in the prime of her edgy doll featured sensuality as the titular Miranda, an enigma and sexual chameleon who captivates men for a series of deceptive reasons relating to industrial skullduggery, whilst John Simm - back when he seemed to be perpetually, Puckishly youthful - plays the innocent caught in the trap, an everyman slacker librarian who just may have a place in her heart. John Hurt essentially gives his Stephen Ward performance from Scandal another airing (albeit with a lighter touch) languidly creepy as Miranda's pimpish, hustling 'Svengali', whilst Kyle MacLachlan brings a touch of Lynchian dark humour and obsessive perversity to his threatening supporting role. 

The rest of the cast is rounded out by a series of TV faces all just a fraction before they become more familiar or a household name; Julian Rhind Tutt - hilarious as ever, playing Simm's best mate, and then there's Tamsin Greig, Cavan Clerkin and Joanne Froggatt. But essentially the film belongs to Ricci and Simm, a partnership which isn't as improbable as it initially sounds and is suitably played without too much natural chemistry; Simm always a step behind the woman of his dreams as he struggles to find the real Miranda.

It's a film that ticks by well enough but it may just be a little too cool for its own good, with its tonality and eclectic retro soundtrack. I can't help feel it's a film slightly out of step with the passing parade of the late 90s where it may have thrived in better just 3 years earlier - though that said, the similar 'fucked up romcom' A Life Less Ordinary never found its rightful audience at that time either.

Great opening credits in a faux video game style set the scene for the film's playfulness rather well. It's blocky imagery now being cutely retro.



Oh and "You've got the face of a child, but your eyes are old" may well be the best line of dialogue to sum up Ricci's cinematic appeal at that time.

Miranda is never going to be a film which I'll be screaming 'oh my God you have to see this!' over, but if it ever appears on Channel 4 or Film 4 late at night - or, you pick it up cheap on DVD as I did -  I'd recommend giving it a whirl. It's short enough at 90 minutes and doesn't outstay it's welcome. The DVD has a few minor bonus features includes interviews, a trailer and a featurette (which incorporates sound bites from the aforementioned interviews)