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DirectorLynne Ramsay
Stars Tommy Flanagan, Mandy Matthews, William Eadie
Certificate 15
Running time 97 mins
Made UK, 1999
IN THE tradition
of Bill Douglas' My Childhood, Lynne Ramsay, with her first feature
film, displays an honesty that shines like the stars.
Essentially the story of a 12-year-old boy's anguish after a tragic
accident, it explores his feelings of isolation within the family,
and his friendship, deeper than secrets, with a 14-year-old girl who
gives favours to the school gang.
Shot in Glasgow, it captures the shared grief amongst women, the casual
cruelty of boys at play, the poverty of hope in tenements that need
to be pulled down, the sadness of the romantic heart.
The boy's father is a drunk. His sisters fight. They all fight. His
mother makes jam sandwiches as a treat and wonders how she's going
to pay the rent next week.
The humour is in the detail, patchworked between bleakness and the
unpredictability of danger. The boy's fascination with the canal is
like a death game, as if fear cures his loneliness.
He takes a bus all the way out into the country, where corn is the
colour of honey. This, he believes, is paradise, where some day, one
day, he will come to live. "I want a big house with a bath and a toilet
and a field," he says.
There is an artistic sensibility in Ramsay's approach to film. It
is not enough to show deprivation, squalour, marital exhaustion. She
looks for something more, the human touch, the poetry in pain.
She writes tough, but feels soft. Also, she has a painter's eye and
everything she does is hers. She does not steal ideas from other people
and her work with the children is remarkable.
The Wolf
RealVideo
location report of Ratcatcher
Lynne Ramsay and stars
at Ratcatcher World Premiere
Ratcatcher scoops top award at London Film Festival '99
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