Kes
1 9 6 9 (UK)
Poor Billy Casper (played to perfection
by David Bradley) suffered the slings and arrows of outrageous
Yorkshire, but it wasn't all in vain because the bird-loving Barnsley
boy created a British film archetype; The put-upon Northern Lad.
The hardship is positively heaped upon
this poor, frail lad - Bullying brother, negligent mother, taunting
schoolmates, psychotic teachers and little prospect of any meaningful
future. It's a particularly British form of bleakness which, thanks to
our continued industrial decline, has become a sure-fire shortcut to
audience sympathy (as long as the hero doesn't wallow in his misery
but takes up an unconventional pastime).
It could have been a full-blown Kleenex
drencher but, mercifully, Loach was more concerned with commenting on
real-life class barriers, production-line education policies and
general state indifference without coming across as an unpalatable
revolutionary - something he's made a living out of ever since.
So the pill is considerably sweetened
with scenes of both quiet tenderness (especially between Billy and his
pet kestrel - just about the only functional relationship in the
entire film) and hilarious comedy, such as the superb scene where
Billy tries to avoid PE and Games at school, but is forced into a
soccer match by a bullying PE teacher (the marvellous Brian Glover) .
. .
The bad players are chosen last while
Glover sows the seeds for his own glory by grabbing the best, only to
be stuck with Billy (who he sticks in goal). The tedium of the
rain-soaked game to Billy is evident as he turns the goal post into
monkey-bars in his ill-fitting kit.
Glover is preposterous as the PE teacher
who still yells great players names whenever he gets the ball, and
from the cold breath of a Barnsley winter to the mud-caked knees, this
is school football down to a tee.
Virtually everyone who worked on Kes
(shot on a budget of only £157,000 in just eight weeks) went on to
bigger and better things:- David Bradley (who was picked out of
a local classroom) went on to a successful professional career,
Billy's mum (Lynne Perrie) moved into Coronation Street as Ivy
Tilsley and Brian Glover became the voice of Tetley's tea.
Kes is based on the original novel
A Kestrel For A Knave by the brilliant South Yorkshire author,
Barry Hines (who also wrote the disturbing
Sheffield-gets-nuked-and-life-reverts-to-the-stone-age Threads). |