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Raining Stones (1993)

User reviews

Raining Stones

25 reviews
8/10

Yet another great Ken Loach film.

  • mob61uk
  • Jul 1, 2002
  • Permalink
8/10

When you are a worker, it rains stones seven days a week.

Raining Stones is directed by Ken Loach and written by Jim Allen. It stars Bruce Jones, Julie Brown, Ricky Tomlinson, Tom Hickey, Mike Fallon and Jonathan James. Music is by Stewart Copeland and cinematography by Barry Ackroyd.

Northern England and as unemployment bites hard, Bob (Jones) frets about finding the money for his daughter's communion dress...

It's classical Loach, an awareness of the lower to working class lifestyle during a politically turbulent time. As is the great director's want, realism leaps out from every frame, earthy humour is evident and Loach draws you into his kitchen sink world with ease. Raining Stones has no political agenda as such, it's primary focus is the people, specifically examining how a basically honest hard working man has pride in abundance but little brains in accompaniment. And we all know what pride comes before...

The structure is simple, an hour of film lets us know the principal players, their surroundings and their beliefs. Humour dominates the narrative at this point, be it nutty ideas like stealing a sheep off of the Moors to sell to the butcher - Bob's date with a sewer drain - and Tommy (Tomlinson) showing his ass and genitals to an overhead police helicopter! There are scenes and snatches of dialogue that genuinely bring the laughs. Yet lurking in the background is the palpable sense of things about to turn bad, which is the case of course, and the film shifts for its last third into dramatic thriller mode.

Religion is a feature, but again it's not something that Loach wants to use as a tool for head beating. In fact it's refreshing that the portrayal of Father Barry (Hickey excellent), who is the glue that binds his unemployed flock together, is not about pious pontificating, he's very aware of the times and happy to share a glass of whiskey with Bob and offer up some surprising advice. Cast performances are across the board great, something which is another trait of Loach's direction, while Ackroyd's photography around the Middleton, Rochdale locale is suitable stripped back to reveal a climate of struggle.

A must for anyone with a kink for Loach's type of story telling, Raining Stones is another fine entry on his considerable CV. 8/10
  • hitchcockthelegend
  • Mar 28, 2013
  • Permalink
8/10

Very close to the bone

Christ this film is set in Middleton, pretty much where I live. I remember seeing this when I was about 10 years old and being taken aback at it's accuracy. Everything about it is working-class Manchester, portrayed objectively for the most part. Mancunians appreciate honesty, self mockery and self reflection. My dad and my brother both like this film and I can see why - they're part of it in a sense, as am I. It's not all about struggling to pay the rent, queueing up in the dole office and chugging through the drizzle ridden streets in a Ford Transit - it's about looking at your own life and your own culture being represented by a director who tries to keep things as organic as possible. It's about recognising your environment, where you have come from.
  • pigeoncake
  • Aug 30, 2005
  • Permalink

A natural and convincing story about the traps of poverty and the spirit of the poor

Bob Williams is one of many unemployed in his area and faced with doing cash-in-hand work and odd jobs to keep his family's heads above water. Regardless of his and his wife's hardships they are both committed Catholics. His daughter is having her first communion and Bob wants her to fit in with the others – meaning a new dress and shoes which will total about £100. His attempts to raise the money mostly brings very small reward and frustration. Meanwhile his luck runs nothing but bad and his van is stolen – limiting his ability to pick up jobs and get around. As his debts rise, so do his troubles and his desperation.

The type of film that Ken Loach made his name directing, this film is a touching and natural ode to the spirit of the poor man. The plot is not so much a typical day in the life as a dramatic piece that follows the downward spiral of Bob as a representation of how life on the breadline is one challenge after another. In Bob's life an one-off expense of £100 is a major incident to be gotten through rather than the inconvenience that it is for the majority of us. The film does a very good job of portraying it – it isn't a film noir descent into crime but rather just the spirit of a man fighting to pay the bills. Most of us will have had this at some point but few of us can relate to those that get by daily on odd-jobs and going door-to-door; however the script here lays it out convincingly and naturally, easily allowing me to get into the lives before me. In this regard it is impacting because the humour and desperation of the people is convincing and their day-to-day situation dire.

The cast all take the material and run with it and there are few here that I didn't totally believe. Jones wears the character like a second skin and fits into it really well. His desperation is well complemented by Tomlinson who adds the comic spirit to the bottom classes. The rest of the cast are solid despite not having the limelight in the same way. Brown is good despite having the very occasional rare moment. Phoenix is sweet and natural and the rest of the cast feel mostly real. Loach's direction is grainy and fits the world his story is in.

I hate to use the words over and over again but this is a convincing and natural story and it is touching and engaging as a result. It does a great job of capturing the spirit of the poor, making the best of what they have – but not ever ignoring the fact that Bob et al are the type of shifty people who you wouldn't want to mess with.
  • bob the moo
  • Aug 3, 2006
  • Permalink
7/10

A classic Loach/Allen collaboration, even if the protagonist is an idiot

  • dr_clarke_2
  • Dec 10, 2022
  • Permalink
9/10

9/10

Like many, I often found the accents hard to decipher. But I think it speaks to Loach's formidable talent that it's never really in question as to what's happening: we get the story in visible strokes, and we get the emotional feeling in the most minute, detailed way possible. To use a clichéd phrase, it has the drama of life, and Loach has a loving touch, even though the outer view of his work is rough and hard: he doesn't separate the funny bits from the painful bits, he lets it all run together. And despite the fact that some find him an "uncinematic" director, I think that's mostly baloney. No, he doesn't impress with his visuals, but that doesn't mean that they're uncinematic; he's working in a way that's more interested in recording emotions (and he still tells a story) and that is cinematic.

The film espouses a wonderful philosophy -- love and prayer is enough. Yet while the film is sympathetic to the emphasis the family places on communion (getting into Heaven), at times it feels like a condemnation of Catholic greed and pie-in-the-sky fantasies of those relying on God to solve their earthly troubles -- after all, He doesn't buy communion dresses. I think that's why the film works so well. It never spells out how intelligent it is, because that's not Loach's intention. Yet what he does is incredibly smart. (Likewise, you can see the politics behind the film, and that's why they work, too: they're behind it, not in your face.) The ending might seem a little too cheery (though cheery is perhaps the wrong word), but I think it works in the tradition of great humanism: things WILL be alright in the end, if you just believe. And because it's humanism, it's true: everything else might be awful, but you're alive, you have a family, you're fighting to go on: that's wonderful.

Loach makes a brilliant choice with the car crash, because it solves something and yet it makes the moral universe of the film more complex: Is he scott free now? Who is the bad guy here? And Loach of course includes the most pragmatic priest in the movies -- pray for the worthless soul as any good Christian would, but realize that he who causes fear in the hearts of good people is not a life worth wrecking yours over. Consider the car crash an act of God (which indirectly benefits God, by supporting a family of followers), rewarding he who believes yet still exists in the practical world trying to make things work (he who doesn't just lay around waiting for God to save him). THIS is Catholic cinema. I'm agnostic, and this touched my soul. It gets at the roots of what real religion does, or is supposed to do: heal, protect, love -- not preach, frighten, or intimidate. So I think even though he opts for a "faith" film (that is, he does not offer a text book on how to solve your problems), Loach's "realism" and pragmatic philosophy still suggests that the everyday is important -- keep at it. It's what leads to the faith, it's what's needed for the faith to work. 9/10
  • desperateliving
  • Feb 1, 2005
  • Permalink
7/10

Good movie, pathetic soundtrack

Quite uneven movie. Starts very slow, spend too long in episodes that could be abbreviated then squeezes the final act in a dubious conclusion amid the general tone of the movie. Despite that the direction is strong and the acting excellent.

The soundtrack by famous musician Stewart Copeland from The Police is a tremendous disappointment. Made on the cheap with synthetizers is really disconnected from the bleakness of the movie. Not only the limited musical cues are badly placed but they also lack any melodic quality (one of the themes sounds like random notes in a sequencer against uninspired chords). It really gives no support for scenes and characters.
  • sendspamhere-68868
  • Jan 15, 2022
  • Permalink
8/10

A human document of considerable strength

Bob (Bruce Jones) is on the dole. With barely enough money to pay his rent, he is still determined to buy his daughter Coleen (Gemma Phoenix) a new dress for Communion, an investment of a few hundred pounds. The truth of the characters and an authentic script by Jim Allen lifts Ken Loach's 1993 drama Raining Stones out of the ordinary and makes it a human document of considerable strength. Bob's spirit propels the story and allows us to root for him as he tries to overcome his failure to find the means to fulfill his wishes for his daughter.

As the film opens, Bob and his friend Tommy (Tomlinson) steal a sheep from the countryside but cannot bring themselves to kill it. Instead they bring it to the butcher who tells them that it is mutton, not lamb and it is worthless to him. When they attempt to sell it piece-by-piece at the local tavern, they leave the keys in the ignition and Bob's van is stolen. Bob goes from one misadventure to another, from stealing sod from a golf course for a landscape gardener to a one-night stand as a bouncer at a local pub that ends up with him getting beaten and losing his job in the process. One of the funniest scenes takes place at the local church where Bob is forced into donating his services to clean their drains and ends up only with thanks from the pastor and a bucket full of dirt on his clothes. Supporting Bob is a supportive pastor (Tom Hickey), who urges him to rent a dress at a reduced cost, and his wife Anne (Julie Brown) who stands with him in periods of distress.

The second part of the film centers around Bob's efforts to raise the necessary cash to buy the dress and his unfortunate choice of borrowing the money and having to deal with a loan shark that gets him and his family into serious trouble. The script by Jim Allen rings true although, without subtitles, much of the dialogue is drowned in regional accents. Raining Stones builds to a powerful ending with an unforced naturalism that makes us feel for the characters as human beings, not as symbols of a society that has turned its back on its poorest members.
  • howard.schumann
  • May 29, 2005
  • Permalink
7/10

I thought the Scots spoke English

"Raining Stones" is a gritty slice-of-life dramady about a working class family man who has to persevere through difficult financial times to save enough money for his daughter's first communion. An excellent little film by all accounts, this flick builds great depth in its characters making empathy so easy you'll likely speak with a brogue by film's end. In typical Loach fashion, "Raining Stones" works hard fleshing out its characters in fine detail and realistic fashion rather than going for easy, expansive sensationalism. A good human drama with a sense of humor which will most likely be appreciated by more mature audiences. (B)

Note: The DVD I watched had no subtitles or CC and the accents were so thick much of the dialogue was difficult to understand.
  • =G=
  • Aug 16, 2003
  • Permalink
9/10

Bob Williams is a survivor !

Raining Stones is a gritty urban tale of life with no money or hope! Bob Williams(Bruce Jones) has to raise the cash for his daughters first communium dress! He's determined to get the best one, which is the dearest, ably followed with his long suffering wife(Julie Brown) and his best mate Tommy (Ricky Tomlinson). From gutting drains to stealing turf and sheep! He struggles to raise the cash and has to visit a loan shark- 'Tansey' , with devastating consequences! Bob's a survivor, but will it all come good in the end?! Another Brilliant film from Ken Loach! 8/10
  • boffins
  • Oct 11, 2001
  • Permalink
7/10

worth while but leaves me with some Q's..

Hi really enjoyed it - i could appreciate the issues highlighted - and loved the comic element "heads down arses out" lol.. however I am not sure about the priest's advice.. would this happen in reality? I would have imagined that a catholic priest would have advised him to go to the police... or is he seeing the police as being part of the flawed society in which they live? But in fairness, he was the cause of the guy to crash into the pillar (having smashed the window screen in etc)

I dunno - I would like to think that Ken is being realistic and fair but I think that there is a bias here..

In any event I really enjoyed it... gee I felt so much for the daughter - but in fairness she seemed tough too - (hands on hips when the loan shark was in the house)
  • jacintafortunata
  • May 29, 2017
  • Permalink
8/10

Where Unemployment Hits the Hardest...

"Raining Stones" is one of those films that initially looks like it is going to be painful to watch. The despair of the blue-collar English, working hard to make ends meet, the idea that religion is a part of the family, and a proud father willing to do anything for his daughter feels more like a Mike Leigh film than a Loach drama, but Loach stands up and demonstrates his ability to produce amazing cinema. It is a scene we have seen many times before, a father down on his luck with his family and life does anything (sewage, bounce, and sheep stealing) to provide a brand new dress for his daughter's first Communion. He is determined to give his daughter a memory she will always cherish, but he is also determined to prove his worth to his entire family. This is where the drama and real humanity of all Loach's characters begin to shine.

This didn't initially seem like a film worth watching, hesitantly I worried this would be one of those over dramatic family dramas that pulled everything out of you only to leave you bored, desensitized, and counting the final minutes - within the first ten minutes of Loach's film, I knew that I was wrong. To begin, our main protagonist, completely full of flaws, but boiling over with pride, captures your attention. Our patriarch, Bob (played delicately by Bruce Jones), is immediately recognizable and relatable. Loach gives him that blue- collar, everyman appeal that isn't sugar-coated or fabricated. The instances may seem episodic at times, but what happens to Bob is real. Add to this mix his devotion to the Catholic faith, and we have a powerfully well-rounded character that leads us in and out of difficult times. With Bob is his conscious, or voice of future, the unemployed Tommy creates this very sad world, but it isn't bleak. Jobs are found, dresses are ordered, and money is used - it is the destination with this film, not the journey. Bruce Jones' ability to control each scene, whether it is getting a bitter or going door to door searching for work, he is someone that we stand proudly next to. Loach has crafted a man that screams sympathy. During every moment of this film, we root for Bob, we cheer when he finds work, and each downfall we feel as well. That is a great accomplishment as both a director and an actor if each scene can bring out such emotion.

Not only is the acting Oscar worthy, but Loach's (with Jim Allen) story is outstanding. From that opening scene, he pulls you into this world that feels real, that seems plausible, that demonstrates the struggle without being vulgar or gross. It is a normal town, these are trying times, Bob wants to provide for his family, and what he goes through to accomplish this is breathtaking. As Loach introduces religion into this story, a very vital element to this film, it seems only natural that when in trouble, when you feel like you can turn to nobody, the Church is there, God is there, your local priest is there to talk you through the trouble. It isn't overbearing, it isn't preachy, it is a way of life for these characters and Loach doesn't force this down our throats. It is again, this feeling of realism that makes "Raining Stones" stand above other films of this nature. If there were a complaint about this film, it would be the sense of timing with Bob. In one moment he has no money, in another he is suddenly debt ridden. It happens rather quickly in a 90-minute film. Also, would a man with no money to his name really spend that much on beer during the week - wouldn't he save it? Or was this Loach's commentary on the blue-collar worker? Never enough money for things that count, but plenty of time for beer and religion. An odd twist...

Overall, this was an impressive film from the beginning all the way to the final moment that put this smile on your face. It was dramatic, it was grounded, and it was passionate for all the right reasons. Loach has proved himself as a director with "Raining Stones", and this is a perfect example of a "don't judge" cover. Again, this wouldn't have been a typical film for me, but what came out of the DVD player was a cinematic dinner. Everything was in place, and you were satisfied by the end. I can only recommend this film to everyone excited about a low- budget, no CGI, drama that shows humanity at its best and worst. It will make you think, make you smile, and make you understand the struggles of life.

Watch this film!

Grade: **** 1/2 out of *****
  • film-critic
  • Aug 21, 2009
  • Permalink
5/10

Typical Loachian social injustice film

Ken Loach bores the audience with yet more stories of social woes in northern England. This time the film follows a down on his look guy played by Bruce Jones (famous as Les Battersby in Coronation Street, a UK television show) struggling to raise the funds for his beloved daughter's Catholic Church Communion dress. He resorts to any old job he can get some legal some illegal and eventually succombs to the local city loan shark.

What makes me cringe with some of these Loach films are that everyone is made out to be broke yet the evil Tories are living in comfort. Total Communist bull as a Conservative Club caretaker says in the film.
  • tonypeacock-1
  • May 17, 2023
  • Permalink

Hyper-realistic masterpiece

I watched this on Channel 4 late one night a few years ago. I had had a bad day at work, and was dog-tired. On the verge of turning off the TV, I caught the beginning, and I was immediately hooked.

Ken Loach provides a hyper-realistic portrayal of life on the edge in the 1990`s. Bruce Jones (later to play the feckless Les Battersby on Coronation Street) displays a remarkable tenderness as the struggling father who desperately tries to obtain enough money to buy his daughter a communion dress. He, and Ken Loach,indicate that this poor man represents the best of the working class, only forced to crime,in order to feed and clothe his family.He is a true hero.

The grim setting and subject matter (a disintegrating council estate, and dingy pubs) are not allowed to swamp the deeply human nature of the tale, and there are a number of moments (especially provided by Ricky Tomlinson), where the mood is lightened, allowing gritty humour to emerge. The opening, where the two heroes are unsuccessfully trying to steal a sheep is hysterical.

I wouldn`t call myself a great Ken Loach fan, but this is his masterpiece. I would call it one on the best British films of all time.
  • grumpy-13
  • Jan 21, 2000
  • Permalink
8/10

An excellent film in its category.

This film I saw when it first came out in 1993. It made such an impression that I can still recall many scenes and the whole story. Ken Loach creates really believable characters who might live next door. He builds and presents the story so the viewer really becomes involved in the cast's problems. It remains my favourite Ken Loach film. An excellent film in its category.
  • dmk2
  • May 5, 1999
  • Permalink
10/10

Captures the heart and soul of the community

This film, based on and shot in Langley, Middleton.

Having grown up on Langley, this film is as real as it was.

Jim Allen, a local writer, lived in the heart of this community, so he knew it inside out. (I even had the pleasure of going to school with his daughter Catherine).

Bruce Jones and Ricky Tomlinson set this film a light from the first frame.

Even the local gangsters get a cameo role! You should not be disappointed with this film.

Nothing much has changed in the town, just a few more boarded up houses and demolished houses.
  • steveparkinsn
  • Nov 25, 2006
  • Permalink
8/10

Empathetic film

Bob has problems making a living. His wife mainly cares for the house and their daughter, and finds it hard to get a job as well. Bob and his friend Tommy are involved in tiny crimes-stealing a sheep, a part of a lawn etc, but ends never meet. The situation becomes worse when Bob and Anne's daughter is going to have her communion. Bob wants to buy her a new outfit, no matter what everyone tells him. He gets into deeper trouble by the day.

Loach has compassion for his characters, however, and the film is not depressing although it shows poverty and how it drains people. He also discusses religion here-the priest is a human version, and Bob's F-I-L represents the opposition. Interesting that he hasn't written the script, and yet it has so much to do with many of his films.
  • avital-gc-1
  • Nov 3, 2013
  • Permalink
9/10

Real and Gripping - from 'the off'!

  • paulgeaf
  • Jul 29, 2007
  • Permalink

Top Stuff

Filmed around the low unemployment and depressed "overspill" council estate of Langley in Middleton, Manchester. This was the perfect setting for Raining Stones ( the title speaks for itself, it means, nothing is easy, everything hurts or is hard ) True local rumour has it, that the villains of the film are loosely based on a notorious underworld family of the same area.

One mans determination to have the very best for his daughters holy communion leads him into many escapades as he tries honestly and dishonestly to raise enough money for the apple of his eyes holy communion dress. From cleaning drains to sheep rustling on the local moor he eventually and without his partners knowledge borrows the money His inability to pay the lender the money back results in the local loan shark buying the debt (this is a common practice) the loan shark and his entourage then proceed to chase the unfortunate man for there money. Great stuff, realistic and treasure to watch.
  • j-scott33
  • Dec 18, 2002
  • Permalink
9/10

Workers with no work. Loach knows this territory.

Raining Stones (1993) is an English film directed by Ken Loach. In this movie, director Loach hammers home his frequent message--workers who can't find work are driven to more and more desperate actions.

Bruce Jones plays Bob, a loving husband and father. Julie Brown portrays his wife, Anne. Bob and Julie are just barely managing to get along, but, as the title suggests, they gradually get pushed to the point when they just don't have enough money for a key purchase.

This purchase is an expensive communion outfit for their daughter. Their parish priest suggests a gown donated to the church, but they are too proud to accept this. They may have problems, but they will have a new dress for the young girl's first communion.

As the plot continues things get worse. The ending of the film was a surprise to me. I didn't see it going that way, and it didn't seem typical for Loach. However, I believe it works.

We saw this film on the small screen, which was OK. Raining Stones has a strong IMDb rating of 7.4. I think it's even better than that.

P.S. On the case of the DVD, Roger Ebert is quoted as saying. "The funniest of Ken Loach's films about working-class life in modern Britain." I don't know what film Ebert saw, but it couldn't have been the one I saw. Raining Stones is an excellent movie, but it's not funny.
  • Red-125
  • Feb 11, 2020
  • Permalink
9/10

Raining Stones

Just some information for you - I met Bruce Jones briefly yesterday (Mar 5/05) at the British Isles Show in Toronto. I asked him about this film (I could not remember the title) which I had seen on TV a few years ago.

He told me that the film is now used by the Catholic church as part of their training program for new priests. He also commented "There was a lot of language in it." - leading me to believe that he felt it was a bit over the top in that department. Personally, I thought it fit in with the story and characters, but his comment was a small, yet interesting, insight into Bruce Jones - who most of us only now know as Les Battersby!
  • chris_arj_98
  • Mar 5, 2005
  • Permalink
9/10

Not for the faint of heart

A lot like Brookside, but it rains more.

Seriously, I really think this is a very well made film, but I think Ken should be forced to make a feel good Disney movie at least once.
  • tgtround
  • Jul 13, 2000
  • Permalink
8/10

Sympathy for the underdog, but not portraying it as a saint

The main character in "Raining Stones" is Bob (Bruce Jones), an unemployed man from Northern England. Bob and his family suffers from poverty but they try very hard to keep up appearances. When his grown up daughter gives Bob some money for an evening out he is very ashamed about it. When his youngest daughter needs a dress for her first communion Bob decides that it needs to be a very beautiful dress and not a second hand one. But where to find the money?

This starting situation is elaborated upon brilliantly in the opening scene. Bob and a friend try to steal a sheep to slaughter it and sell the meat. When after much trouble they have catched the sheep and transported it to their backyard they find out that neither of them has the courage to slaughter it.

Director Ken Loach has had sympathy for the underdog all his life. Bob is a typical Loach main character as is Daniel Blake from the "I, Daniel Blake" (2023) movie more than 20 years later.

Comparing Bob with Daniel Blake there are lots of similaries. Both are unemployed, both are poor, both have their pride and both have a good heart.

There are however differences too. Daniel Blake got unemployed due to health problems, that is without his fault. We do not know the reason why Bob got unemployed, but during the film we get to know him as something of a tinker (see the description of the opening scene above) so we can imagine that he was not wholly innocent in losing his job.

The enemy of Daniel Blake is the government bureaucracy, and this is portrayed in a very realistic way. The enemy of Bob becomes a loan shark (that's the way he got the money for the dress) and this shark is portreyed in a rather cartoonish way.

Yes indeed Ken Loach has had sympathy for the underdog all his life, but has definitely not grown mild at old age.
  • frankde-jong
  • Mar 2, 2024
  • Permalink

It's 'Shame-less'!

Having just watched this film, I found the similarities between it and the UK TV Series 'Shameless' amazing. The depiction of the working class as opportunist thieves taking what the can to sell for whatever they can is not a new concept I suspect.

Raining Stones is the most upbeat and funniest of Loach's films which I have seen. When Bob and Tommy steal the sheep from the moors at the beginning of the film I was wetting myself. Then they went to sell the meat in the local pub and I nearly died. That is my local pub, these people really exist. Classic.

The film is also about one man's struggle to maintain his masculinity as a working class male in Britain at a time when there was no work for labourers. The decline of the manufacturing industries has had a massive impact on the working class in Britain and changed the way they can earn a living and provide for their families. Many are forced to live off the state and to be honest, the money wouldn't feed a chicken let alone a family who want to have all of the things which this society says you can have like a communion dress.

The ending is somewhat ambiguous though. Bob borrows the money from a loan shark and when he cannot pay him back, the loan shark attacks his wife and daughter. Bob retaliates by going after him with a spanner (quite appropriate, may as well use it for something) and inadvertently causes his death. His priest tells him not to go to the police. His daughter attends communion in her dress. The end. But what happened? Did he get caught? Did his wife find out? Is Loach advocating killing loan sharks in order to avoid repayment? I'm not sure about the ending but what we grasp from the film is that it is a struggle to exist when you can't find suitable work but try and help yourself but not starting a fight on your first night as a bouncer will you?
  • Rocky-UK
  • Jan 17, 2006
  • Permalink

Gritty but soft-hitting

Ken Loach's 'Ladybird Ladybird' is one of the most powerful and moving depictions I've seen of the trials and indignities of poverty. While 'Raining Stones' covers the same geographic and class territory, it softens the edges a bit. The very appealing sympathetic family man is delivered from his immediate plight in a somewhat unbelievable way, undercutting the realism that Loach so excels at.
  • msegall
  • Feb 4, 2002
  • Permalink

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