Dom Robinson reviews
Brassed Off
Distributed by
VCI
Producer:
Screenplay:
Music:
Trevor Jones (with Brass Band Music by the Grimethorpe Colliery Band )
Cast:
Danny: Pete Postlethwaite (The Usual Suspects, The Lost World - Jurassic Park, Crimetime, Dragonheart, Romeo and Juliet (1996), Suite 16, When Saturday Comes, TV appearances: "Sharpe's Company", "Sharpe's Enemy" )
Gloria Mullins: Tara Fitzgerald (Sirens, Hear My Song, TV appearances: "The Tenant Of Wildfell Hall", "The Camomile Lawn" )
Andy: Ewan McGregor (Trainspotting, A Life Less Ordinary, Shallow Grave, The Pillow Book, TV appearances: "E.R." )
Phil: Stephen Tompkinson (TV appearances: "Drop The Dead Donkey", "Ballykissangel")
Harry: Jim Carter (A Private Function, Blame It On The Bellboy, The Madness Of King George, Richard III )
Sandra: Melanie Hill (TV appearances: "Bread" )
Vera: Sue Johnston (Face, TV appearances: "Brookside" )
McKenzie: Stephen Moore (Clockwise, Under Suspicion, TV appearances: "Middlemarch", "Sharpe's Sword", "The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, aged 13 3/4" )
Set
in 1992, Brassed Off tells the story of the impending closure of the
Grimley Colliery pit, and the fact that the Grimley Colliery Band is on the
verge of breaking up.
Enter Gloria, who becomes the only female member of the band and manages to
rekindle their enthusiasm for the forthcoming National Championships, as well as
rekindling a childhood romance with Andy.
The show must go on, and despite everyone's troubles, the band have to keep it
together as the National Finals at the Royal Albert Hall are looming...
Seasoned British actor Pete Postlethwaite is one of the most prolific
around to date, and his performance in this film certainly rates as one of his
best. While his character hides a serious medical condition, he also gets some
choice dialogue, such as that when the band does badly in a contest while they
re-establish their band in the community. In the local community hall he tells
off the rest of the band by pointing to black-and-white photos of previous
band members with :
"If some of these were alive today, they'd be turning in their bloody graves"
The two young leads in the film are also well-known in cinema circles. Ewan
McGregor has followed British triumphs such as Trainspotting and
Shallow Grave by making an assault on the American market with an
appearance as a gunman in hit series E.R. and with the director of the
above two British films in A Life Less Ordinary . The gorgeous Tara
Fitzgerald , playing the daughter of Arthur Mullins, one time a member of
the band, hasn't made it to Hollywood yet, concentrating more on homegrown
drama, plays the band's new arrival, and as they realise they're meant for one
another, Gloria leads the conversation in which the words of love speak their
name...
"Do you want to come up for a coffee?"
"I don't drink coffee"
"I haven't got any..."
The rest of the cast is filled out with British regulars such as Stephen
Tompkinson whose love of the brass band raises his hopes when everything
else in life is falling apart including his marriage as he fails to keep up with
the repayments despite also keeping a job as Mr. Chuckles the clown.
Jim Carter 's character's marriage is in equal dire straits as they work
completely opposite hours and the only time they see each other is as they
cross the doorstep. Sue Johnston , recently seen in the British crime
thriller Face as the mother of Robert Carlyle, and Melanie Hill
are the best of friends, while the always-welcome Stephen Moore plays a
local council official.
The picture quality of the disc is near-perfect, bringing life to the town of
Grimley making even the mostly drab-looking look attractive. In fact it would
have received a perfect score had it not been for a few pressing defects early
on in the film and again at the start of side two. This is certainly not a
big enough problem to deter anyone from buying the disc.
The sound is nothing short of excellent, with the best use made by the rousing
performance of the Grimethorpe Colliery Band, the real talent behind the Grimley
Colliery Band's performance.
The chaptering is very good too, although it is annoying that the film doesn't
start at the beginning of its own chapter. Chapter 1 opens with the VCI logo
and an advert for The Guardian, sponsors of Film on Four, and then goes into
the film. An extra chapter should have been inserted there as the second one
is placed at the end of the opening credits. Similarly, an extra chapter
should have been placed at the start of the closing credits as they come
almost 90 seconds into the final one, A Night On The Town .
Overall, you can't beat a fine film lead by a class cast, and despite the
obvious political elements of Conservative Party-bashing, this is exactly what
you have here. This is the one of three discs released by VCI in their
first foray into the PAL Laserdisc market, a move to be congratulated as more
companies are getting in on the act. The other currently released titles
are
Fever Pitch and
Secrets And Lies .
Film: 5/5
Picture: 4/5
Sound: 5/5
Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 1997.
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