Capital Celluloid 2014 - Day 68: Sun Mar 9

Brassed Off (Herman, 1996): Tricycle Theatre, 5pm


I love this dialogue between Ewan McGregor and Tara Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald will be at this screening as will writer/director Mark Herman and fellow stars Stephen Tompkinson, Sue Johnston, Philip Jackson and Jim Carter. This is screening as part of the British Clsssics season. More details here.

Time Out review:
This is an angry, tragic film, which softens you up with a few off-the-peg stereotypes and colloquial laughs and then rams them back down your throat. Pete Postlethwaite is Danny, the devoted leader of the Grimley Colliery Band. Music is so important to him, he barely notices that the pit's on the verge of closure, and can't begin to understand why members like Andy (McGregor), Harry (Carter) and even his own son, Phil (Tompkinson), are finding it hard to cough up their subs. Matters come to a head with the band competing in the national championships and the miners voting for voluntary redundancy. Writer/director Herman pulls off a popular, proletarian comedy which might actually appeal to the people it's about. He uses comic shorthand - not all the relationships are as developed as they might be - but captures a credible sense of the tensions within the community at large, and the devastating impact of the pit closures. He's not shy about laying the blame, either. Tompkinson, Postlethwaite and Carter are stand-outs in an impressive ensemble cast, but for many, the brass band music will come as the real revelation.
Tom Charity

Here is the famous clown scene.

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