Evaporating Youth
This is the story a
couple of misfits, trapped in the cycle of poverty and
violence. There are four of them, under-privileged urban youth,
including a girl named Mo who is a habitual kleptomaniac. Un-educated
lot, not heard of Albert Einstien, don’t have any idea what Mona
Lisa is. Worse, they use “philippine” in place of
“philistine”. They work towards changing their environment and
eventually come out of the gutter.
The protagonist of Ken Loach's "Angels' Share" is a
25 year-old youth named Robbie (Paul Brannigan) who always parks
himself in trouble, mainly on account of his “short-fuse” temper.
His girl-friend's father dismisses Robbie as a sheer “waste of space”.
Gunfights and street brawls are a regular fare. He is already
convicted and served a jail-term. A unilateral fight Robbie picked up
with an young man who was going to meet his girl landed him in the 'government guest-house' finally .
Robbie orders the guy to park his car elsewhere and almost
simultaneously takes out a knife! The victim has twelve stitches on
his head and vision of the left eye is irreparably lost. Our man
meets the victim as a part of TASC (Talk After Serious Crime) and it
does make an effect. Robbie just can’t think of a similar event
happening to his child. Sadly enough, he can’t break out from
the cycle of violence. His latest mis-adventure is yet another fight
on the street in which he injures three fellow-rowdies.
Robbie’s crime is
recited before a magistrate alongwith that of others and the judge
takes a lineant view. The thing that works out to Robbie’s favor is his imminent fatherhood. The judge sentences all the four misfits
for “Community Payback” during which they have to do compulsory
social work by way of manual labor.
Robbie waits for the judgment |
Harry (John
Henshaw), the warm-hearted Community Service Supervisor is introduced
here as a friendly and good-humored shepherd of the black-sheeps. He
is also a connoisseur of good whiskey. He takes the ‘misfits’ to a
distillery tour and there Robbie discovers his whiskey-rating
abilities. He has a fine nose. He collects information from all
sources and turns into a pro.
The gang of four at the Whiskey Festival |
It so happens that
Harry takes all the four to a Whiskey Festival at Edinburgh which
is a rendezvous for millionaires to flaunt their fine taste. The rarest
whiskeys of the world are open to auction. Robbie is accepted to
this elite club and the ‘gang of four’ collects the info that the
rarest barrel costing more than a million pounds is coming up for
auction. Mo is at work again and she steals the site-map of the
factory and warehouse from a shady collector named Thaddeus (Roger
Allam).
‘Angels’ Share’
becomes an unbelievably low-tech heist movie from this point. The
quartet reaches the ware-house where no surveillance cameras or
security guards are in operation(??!!), Robbie gets a walk-over and
siphons off three bottles. He replaces the volume with ordinary
whiskey and make a quick exit. One bottle is broken during the
operation and out of the balance, they gift one bottle to Harry. The
last bottle is sold off to Thaddeus for “hundred grands” (100,000
pounds). Of course, they share the booty equally among themselves.
The shady bidder also arranges a regular job for Robbie outside Glasgow.
The quartet decides
to start a new life bidding adieu to their wayward past. After all,
the misfits are victims of environment and circumstances but
essentially good.
Robbie leaves
Glasgow once and for all. The jail-bird wants to give a head-start to
his son , he doesn’t want to perpetuate the same conditions for his
‘wee-man’ Luke....one look into the baby’s eyes is enough!
The family |
This positive aspect
relegates all those ‘relevant questions’ that we are going to
ask,
How come the
Security is so lax for the one million pound barrel?
How can you conduct
a heist with hose, hammer and head-light?
How’s it possible
for a professional not to detect the appalling quality while
tasting?
The answers do not
matter. These young people are shaping up their destiny in spite of
tough circumstances. Salute them!
The name of the
movie refers to the 2% loss every year when the whiskey evaporates
into thin air through porous oak (of the barrel). The Angels are getting a taste of it!
As usual, Ken Loach
is trying ‘fresh stock’. The hero, Paul Brannigan, who has got a criminal record to complete his resume, is making his
debut. Son of
heroine addicts, Paul was sent to prison at the tender age of
sixteen! Like Robbie, he too had a girl-friend and a kid in real life.
He too was stuck with few prospects when Ken Loach approached him.
The film also
celebrates Yin-Yang. One can feel it through the relationship between
Robbie and his girl-friend Lionell (Siobhan Reilly). Just watch how
she purifies him.
No wonder "Angels' Share" won the Jury Prize at Cannes in 2012.
No wonder "Angels' Share" won the Jury Prize at Cannes in 2012.
After watching the
film, one can’t help worrying about the sad plight of black
teenagers, especially in the US . Give them quality education , the
looting & killing at the streets will stop. Their mothers must be
in perpetual agony. Think of them at least.
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