News broke yesterday afternoon that Xtra-Vision has come to the brink once again, just two years since it was last saved from oblivion. While the usual bug-bears (aka hares) have been raised it's fair to say that the writing's been on the wall for the home entertainment rental sector for some years now. The talk of illegal downloading sounds like the mutterings of an ostrich with its head buried six feet under.
LoveFilm, Netflix, Sky and a myriad other legal, easier and cumulatively cheaper sources of feature films and box-sets are conveniently overlooked in this pointless finger-pointing. As I discovered myself this week, while sitting at the kitchen table, even a brand new but rare-ish back catalogue UK title from an Irish director can be got from Ebay, for the price of a rental.
Added to this litany of woes the local supermarkets and chain stores are, legitimately, carrying plenty of titles at dump-bin prices. For anything else there's Amazon or, if you're in one of the cities, a specialist video outlet where the staff know their Ozus from their Oshimas.
The last time I passed an open Xtra-vision outlet it looked like a sort of seedy sweet shop that sold some videos and games over the counter. I read that the majority of its business now, going into receivership, is in consumer electronics, an already hugely competitive retail market for which the writing's on the wall for bricks and mortar businesses.
None of this will bring any solace to Xtra-vision's 1,000 staff, on both sides of the border, or to the folks who rescued the business just two years ago and renegotiated lower rents with the landlords of viable outlets. To this passerby, at least, the rescue didn't appear to rejuvenate or re-launch the thirty-four year-old brand that rode the VCR wave with huge success.
VCRs have now been dumped, recycled and fly-tipped by the million. DVD players are headed for the same fate. Even the life of Blu-ray, the format's great hope, can be described as terminal.
So much for show, it's always been business.
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Above us only sky...
...some afterthoughts about What Richard Did.
Let me first
offer the proviso that film reviewing invariably expresses some degree of receptivity and
projection on the part of the reviewer. Too
much receptivity and objective critical distance is lost. Too much projection and the response will be
more about the critic than the film itself. [I might add, belatedly, that not enough of either and one should consider finding another line of work.]
This post
is about What Richard Did and what I believe has been missing from most of the commentary I
have read about the film. What follows
flows, seven months after seeing the film, from personal receptivity and projection, in what I hope are balanced
proportions.
Given the
real-life events What Richard Did draws upon it is understandable, in Ireland
at least, that much of what has been written about the film has addressed its verisimilitude –
its believability, and the true-to-life quality of the performances and the
social milieu created on screen. It was
judged – invariably favourably and with every justification – on its rendering
of the circumstances that led to an unpremeditated act with fatal consequences.
That said, and
as much as the film is about that
act, the film is also about what Richard, and those closest to him, did not do – confess to the authorities so
that the law might take its course.
The fulcrum for this twist, for considering this failure to act as the moral issue and focus of the film, is provided by the moment of raw, blinding
torment expressed at the funeral by the dead boy’s mother, played by Gabrielle
Reidy.
That so
many reviewers of the film neglect or elide this moment is in part a response,
I think, to the resolutely restrained and observational tone of the film up to
that point. The mother’s reaction, a
totally uninhibited show of emotional devastation and anger in the face of the closed
ranks in the pews before her, is as discomfiting to the film’s audience as it
must be to those at the funeral service.
She seems
out of place in this film. She’s over
the top. We wish she’d shut up. Better still, could she take her grief
somewhere else so that we, the audience, can indulge our collusion with handsome,
well-got Richard’s escape from a charge of manslaughter? He didn’t mean it, after all. And anyway, who are we to judge?
Truth be
told, in the real world outside the cinema – precisely where What Richard Did
has its origins – any of us may be called upon for jury service at any time. In a court, unlike on a cinema screen, a
person is either guilty or innocent and pleas of mitigation are not heard until
after the verdict is given by us, the jurors.
But back to
that moment at the funeral. It is, if
memory serves, a classic example of what’s known in the theatre as a Brechtian
device, or the ‘distancing effect’. It
is a crucial part of the dramaturgy of What Richard Did that has escaped the
notice of most commentary I have read on the film. It reflects, moreover, a series of courageous
steps in the writing, in the performance (Brava!,
Ms Reidy) and in the edit, because the audience does not want to be shifted
from the forgiving empathy they have with Richard and his failure to ‘own up’ to his guilt,
itself an act of omission.
The intention
of the distancing effect in drama is to raise consciousness in the audience, to
cause them to reflect, to step back into themselves while they are being
entertained. It is, to say the least, a
tricky device to use in film-making because we, the audience, enter the cinema
with the expectation, perhaps even the intention that we be carried along by
the action in such a way that we escape the reflection that dogs us in our
day-to-day lives.
Perhaps it’s
just me – I grew up in Dublin 4, I went to one of those schools, I camped down in Brittas Bay, I did
the teenage drinking in the nether regions of southside Dublin – but the moment
What Richard Did coalesced as a piece of cinema was in those later, seemingly
purposeless shots of suburban skies, framed between passing trees from an
invisible vehicle. That was when and how the film expressed the silent reaction to the mother's grief. It is, arguably, the only time the film shows its own point of view.
It occurs
to me that this use of the image is what separates Lenny Abrahamson from the
vast majority of Irish film makers, no matter how celebrated or successful they
may be. These others are really dramatists or
storytellers; film just happens to be a medium they use. They could as easily write books or make theatre. Abrahamson, it seems to me, is simply a film-maker. He explores moral questions and cinema is his
natural medium for those explorations.
Months
after seeing the film, and for all the echoes of its adolescent noise, What
Richard Did’s real resonance comes from the reflective breathing space offered
by those few late sequences of the skies over south Dublin, together with a line that
floated in unasked from somewhere else – ‘above us only sky’.
Once I
recalled the source of the line it came to me that it wasn’t just the sky
itself but the correlative meanings of John Lennon’s ‘Imagine’ lyric that had
brought it to mind. A world free of nation
and religion does not mean a world free of individual culpability and conscience, although
it may seem that way in Dublin’s
tree-lined suburbia south of the Liffey.
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Johnny Ferguson, RIP
If there was an Irish prize going for dogged determination as a screenwriter then Johnny Ferguson should have been presented with one years ago. He is one of the very, very few Irish writers of screenplays - I'm excluding writer/directors - to have their work produced and travel successfully. After a short illness Johnny has now left this world for another where, no doubt, he'll be hired to do endless re-writes of St Peter's welcoming words at the pearly gates.
God rest him, and condolences to his family.
God rest him, and condolences to his family.
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