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. My Name Is Joe (1998)
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CV has been a Ken Loach fan for some time now, remembering
not only his films focused on the lives of working class people (Riff-Raff, Ladybird
Ladybird) but also his fine Spanish Civil War movie, Land and Freedom. All of
these films suffered the treatment afforded a great many high quality foreign films
distributed in the United States: they were underpromoted and disappeared from the movie
houses before they ever had a chance to find their audience.
Sadly, if the
experience in San Francisco is typical, the same thing is happening to My Name is Joe,
which opened in dreary Opera Plaza (tiny screens, tiny auditoria), lasted just a few
weeks, and would have completely disappeared were it not for the Four Star, arguably the
most courageous exhibitor in San Francisco. Now they are showing My Name is Joe
and perhaps will be patient enough for word of mouth to spread so that the serious Bay
area movie audience gets a chance to see a brilliant, moving film that is a new pinnacle
of achievement for its director.
Loach has always
been thoughtful, sympathetic to his downtrodden working class subjects, creating films
about them that are based on solid characterization. This is all true of My Name is Joe,
but Loach's artistry has grown. This is his most structured, tightly plotted story to
date. By the end of its hour and three-quarter length, it attains something like the
stature of a classic tragedy, with the insights, pathos, and catharsis that such a label
would imply.
Joe is a recovering
alcoholic in Glasgow, a city whose high levels of unemployment, poverty, and drug
addiction are becoming movie legend. Loach shows us the scrappy life of the have-nots,
with the observant script by Paul Laverty picking up on the smaller things - intrusive
bureaucrats for the social service system, public clinics, even the problem of where a guy
with barely a pence to his name can take a girl on a date. He also shows us how economic
deprivation and immersion in a drug infested community change values; survival transcends
mainstream moral concerns.
We are led still
further to see the deeply seamy side, the hard core addiction that breaks up families,
forces a young mother into prostitution, and fosters a hardened and merciless gangster
underworld. All of this unfolds within the context of Joe's particular experience, as he
tries to rebuild his life, meets a woman and falls in love. In our deepest heart we are
rooting for this guy, who, for all his history in this environment, is a fundamentally
decent person, self knowing and loyal to his friends. And, in our deepest heart, we also
know that the brutal realities of poverty and drugs do not produce happy endings.
Peter Mullan won the
best actor award at Cannes for his portrayal of Joe, an eminently deserved recognition for
one of the finest performances on celluloid in recent years. This is a fully realized
character whose pain doesn't eradicate his sense of fun, whose smarts don't prevent him
from making mistakes, who has felt shame and disgust at his own misbehavior and tried to
turn it around. Mullan has a combination of good looks, virility, and sensitivity all at
once - a terrific package.
His love interest,
nicely played by Louise Goodall, is a health educator/social worker. She says to him at
one point, after he has confessed his greatest shame, "You've never forgiven
yourself. I know about that as well." We believe her and we get a sense of her own
vulnerabilities from her skillful performance, but here the script doesn't fill us in on
her history, a minor weakness. Their romance is credible, sexy, full of hope. If, in
Hollywood, that would have been quite enough, in Glasgow it leads only to foreboding.
- Arthur Lazere