Dom Robinson reviews
My Name is Joe
Distributed by
Film Four
Cat.no: VCD 0016
Cert: 15
Running time: 101 minutes
Year: 1998
Pressing: 1999
Region(s): 2, PAL
Chapters: 16 plus extras
Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1
Languages: English
Subtitles: English for the hard of hearing
Widescreen: 1.85:1
16:9-enhanced: Yes
Macrovision: Yes
Disc Format: DVD 9
Price: £19.99
Extras : Scene index, Trailer, Dolby Digital Trailer, Interviews
Director:
(Black Jack, Carla's Song, Family Life, Fatherland, Flickering Flame, Hidden Agenda, Kes, Ladybird Ladybird, Land and Freedom, Looks and Smiles, My Name is Joe, Raining Stones, Riff Raff, Poor Cow )
Producer:
Screenplay:
Music:
Cast:
Joe: Peter Mullan (The Big Man, Braveheart, Fairytale: A True Story, My Name is Joe, Riff Raff, Shallow Grave, Trainspotting, Director: Orphans )
Sarah: Louise Goodall (My Name is Joe )
Shanks: Gary Lewis (My Name is Joe, Orphans, Postmortem )
"My Name is Joe
and I'm an alcoholic" are the hardest words that unemployed Joe Kavanagh
(Peter Mullan ) has to say at the start of the film. A
recovering alcoholic with more than his fair share of problems
he finds the one thing he's missed in his life for sometime - love -
and it comes in the form of Sarah (Louise Goodall ), a woman
who works at the local GP surgery as a teenage pregnancy advisor.
If you think this is a lovey-dovey happy story then check the name
of the director and think again. Joe isn't the only one with
relationship problems. His football-loving son, Liam (David McKay ),
has a junkie for a girlfriend (Sabine, played by Annemarie Kennedy )
and a very young child, as well as a Mr. Big in tow to whom he owes
£2000 in drug money after a spell in the clink.
The film has a few clever and humorous touches, such as the time
when he's spotted working with his best mate Shanks (Gary Lewis )
by a DSS officer and photographed Les-Battersby-style for doing what
he shouldn't. It's also well-juxtaposed with gripping dramatic scenes
during which you could cut the tension with a knife.
The picture quality is fairly bleak and bland but this is down to the way
Loach films and not a problem causing by the DVD's encoding. The disc is
presented in an anamorphic 1.85:1 original cinematic ratio (not the 16:9
quoted on the back cover) and the average bitrate is a middling 5.27Mb/s, but
while it varies wildly around this, for some reason, between 35 minutes and 70
minutes, it stays at an almost constant 5.2Mb/s ?!
The sound quality is also okay, but not outstanding. Presented in Dolby
Digital 5.1, a brief spurt of classical music is the only time your speakers
will get any sort of workout.
Extras :
Chapters and Trailer :
Could use a few more - 16 for the 101-minute running time - and the original
theatrical trailer.
Languages/Subtitles :
English Dolby Digital 5.1, with subtitles in English for the hard of hearing.
These are often necessary if you're not used to the very strong Scottish
accents.
And there's more... :
29 minutes of Interviews with cast and crew, bizarrely split into
three titles on the disc rather than chapters and the Egypt Dolby Digital
Trailer .
Menu :
A static and silent menu with pictures of Joe and options to start the film,
select a scene, watch the extras or toggle subtitles on/off.
Overall, this is an excellent film only really marred by an unsatisfying
ending when events really come to a head. It's worth a look for anyone,
particularly fans of Loach's work and anyone from abroad for whom a similar
release in their country would be a fat chance.
FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS
OVERALL
Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2000
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