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7 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Summer is a stunner., 17 March 2010
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Author:
JohnRouseMerriottChard from United Kingdom
Every once in a while a fabulous British independent film slips under
the radar and is criminally missed by a ream of cinema goers. Summer is
one such film. It's directed by Kenneth Glenaan, written by Hugh Ellis
and stars Robert Carlyle, Rachael Blake and Steve Evets.
Shaun (Robert Carlyle) and Daz (Steve Evets) were the rouge kids on the
block, best friends forever, they were constantly getting into scrapes.
Thoughts of education were the furthest thing from their minds. We find
Shaun now in adulthood, and now caring for Daz who is crippled and
suffering from terminal cirrhosis. From here the film is told through
Shaun's eyes with flashbacks to better, vibrant times, in particular
the one important summer where Shaun tries to come to terms with life,
loves {Blake as the girlfriend Katy} and where fate stepped in to
change things. It's through these flashbacks that we learn exactly why
Shaun is so devoted to his dying pal.
Structured in the way it is, basically set in three time periods of the
protagonists life, Summer involves the viewers to the maximum with its
characters. So much so that even with the hanging sense of doom in the
air, the nagging question of why is this bond so strong makes for a
fascinating, and emotionally potent, experience. The material and its
central themes could quite easily been given the sledgehammer treatment
by Glenaan, but he directs it in such a subtle way, the final result is
all the more impacting. There's no soft soaping either, the plot is
tough and realistic, these are real people reacting to real life
issues. Something that is helped enormously by the first rate
performances of Carlyle {one of his best ever performances} and Evets.
Complementing the acting is Tony Slater-Ling's beautiful photography,
particularly in the flashback scenes to the boys youth. The warm glow
of the sun, the ripple of the water, the green and pleasant land, each
serve as painful reminders to Shaun of his lost youth. Nostalgia is not
thought of warmly, it is by definition here, a yearning that gnaws away
at his soul. Hugh Ellis' screenplay also deserves plaudits, this may
not be the easiest of viewings, since this is after all about wasted
life and impending death. But there is always hope in the offering, and
coupled with the odd flecks of gallows humour, Ellis has found the
right balance for the story. It's downbeat of course, and you may feel
like you have been thru the mangler come the end. But this really is
excellent film making that tells a worthy and most endearing story.
With Carlyle magnetic and real and Glenaan serving notice that he's a
British director fit to sit alongside Meadows, Loach and Arnold. It's
hoped that more people can find and let Summer into their lives. 9/10
11 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
Heartwarming and real, 3 April 2009
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Author:
abhishek shukla (abhishek.shu@gmail.com) from India
It tells the story of a small town. Of a few wild and good teenagers,
of which few of them could not grow up no matter how hard they tried.
It is a well written and well acted. It shows the nestled world of
these two loyal friends and a girl.
Some would be able to relate much more to this movie., but everyone
will like it for the way it looks at the protagonist life. Its got some
great shots and a simple but lovely background music. In a way the
movie is a little sad, but also paints the beautiful picture of the
mad/nice world some youngsters create for themselves, and then loose.
In a way its the tale of a man who had most of what he needed at one
point in time and later on none of it. But that's fine.
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
An Underrated Drama, 11 November 2010
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Author:
Chirpy_Chaffinch from United Kingdom
Shaun and Daz have been friends since School. Now, in their adulthood, Daz is terminally ill and wheelchair bound. Shaun himself is unemployed and full of frustration and anger about his life. The movie works very well with the flashbacks to their youth when they were tearing around the local neighbourhood and, sometimes, getting into trouble. Shaun develops huge problems by not being able to cope with Dyslexia and the viewer sees his life falling apart. There is also a strong sense that society (and the authorities) are letting Shaun down. This social drama has many facets but it mainly draws on the perceptions that are out there about Dyslexia and its associated problems. The performances, both by Carlyle and Evets are outstanding, the photography sublime and the screenplay is as real as it gets. Highly underrated in my humble opinion.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
The Summer we had it all, 16 November 2011
Author:
thecatcanwait from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Robert Carlyle goes occasionally Begbie in this film (i.e a bit ranty
and ragey, teetering on the vicious tip of violence) But mostly he's
being kind and caring Robert Carlyle; a middle-aged low key loser with
life seemingly finished even before it began.
Where life got started up, consummated, then finished off was back in
that hot lazy Summer 20 odd years ago. When he and teenage best mate
Daz (Steve Evets) were swimming out at the lake, shagging their
girlfriends. And then all too soon to go horribly, tragically,
fatefully, wrong.
Which Shaun and Daz appear to be paying for for/with the rest of their
hopeless lives. Shaun has become (or has "had to become" more like)
crippled Daz's full time carer. They continue to live no hope life's on
the housing estate where they were brought up. They haven't gone
anywhere or done anything. Only got older, sadder (in Daz's case
drunker and iller)
Robert Carlyle does a perfectly adequate job of sensitive, caring,
introverted inadequacy; he does all the right kind of tight lipped
mumbling inarticulacy to get you into sympathy with his role. But i
still felt more inside Robert Carlyle acting the role than feeling
genuinely engaged by the character of Shaun himself. This is the big
problem of casting high profile stars in low key roles; they can never
really get you away from who they are and into who they are pretending
to be. Every where Shaun was i kept seeing Robert Carlyle inserting his
little Robert Carlyle mannerisms and expressions. And this is another
justification i have for watching foreign (non-English) films: you're
seeing the actors and their acting for the first time usually, you
haven't built up associations and identifications from previous films
you've seen them in. Well, this is mostly true. (French films can also
suffer from the same over familiarity)
Anyway, Robert Carlye was OK but somebody else an obscure
journeyman actor would probably have been better. An actor like Steve
Evetts in fact. Even though i'd seen him in that dopey Eric Cantona
film he was totally credible as foul mouthed embittered alcoholic
cripple Daz. Spot on. The scene with him in the shower waiting to get
washed, shouting and swearing and then offering up his quiescent puny
pale body in limp resignation that brought a little gulp to my
throat.
Its possible they had to bring in Robert Carlyle to make the film a bit
more of a bankable commodity. Which may have explained the anomalies
going on: the actor playing teenage Shaun was about 6 ft 3! Far too big
to shrink back into little Robert Carlyle as an adult. Big credibility
gap there. And whats with the Scottish kid living in Lancashire? Why
does he continue to have such a thick Glaswegian accent? Wouldn't that
have been softened or modulated somewhat? (Btw, much of this young
actors Glasge brogue is indecipherable you're guessing at what he's
saying half the time) Its possible the scripting had to be rejigged to
accommodate a Scottish actor (Carlyle)
Another small, but quite significant credibility bloop: the school
fight scene; the director botched the camera angles on that one; the
punching of the face looked totally faked and phony.
It's a slow watch. Economic (with dialogue) and melancholic (with mood)
The sound design and score work well to convey this mood of mourning,
regretful, reminiscent, melancholy.
I can see why most people wouldn't want to watch this (either at the
cinema or at home) Too low key and too much like life lived like it
ordinarily is: nothing much changing, without redemption, often
determined by a single, tragic, throw off the dice. And nothing to be
done. Except wait for life to be over with.
0 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Summer, 24 March 2010
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Author:
Jackson Booth-Millard from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
From Scottish BAFTA winning director Kenneth Glenaan (Magnificent 7, The Good Samaritan), I didn't really know what to expect from this film, only relying on the four star rating and leading actor. Basically Shaun (Scottish BAFTA nominated Robert Carlyle) has been living with and looking after his friend Daz (Steve Evets, who I recognised from an episode of Casualty featured in Harry Hill's TV Burp) ever since his horrible accident owing to his crippling. It all happened in the summer time, and in a series of flashbacks, we see how young Shaun (Matthew Workman, Sean Kelly) and Daz (Christopher Russell, Joe Doherty, Jo Doherty) spent this time. There were happy times spent int he sunshine, and with their friend, well, Shaun's love interest as well, Katy (Bethan Davies, Joanna Tulej). But there were also bad times, like Shaun being labelled as a bully, and he managed to drag his bad luck along with Daz, and of course it all ended tragically with Daz losing his ability to walk. Shaun has to face his past as Daz is on death's door, and he is reunited with Katy (Rachael Blake) as well, but in the end, the death happens, and Shaun tries to see what his future will be like, and whether he can have a happy summer again. Caryle makes quite a good lead, and Evets has his small moments as the crippled friend, it is a subtle film, but with near enough interesting moments to keep you hooked, so a worthwhile drama. It won the Scottish BAFTA for Best Feature Film. Good!
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