Goin'
Down The Road Movie Review:
Goin'
Down the Road is a Canadian film made during a rather unfortunate
time in the Canadian film industry. Back in the 1970`s,
government protectionism was not nearly as strong as it
is now, and therefore Canadian films were few, and cheap.
Goin' Down the Road was one of them, produced in 1970 and
considered by many to be the greatest English-Canadian film
ever produced.
The
story involves Pete and Joey, from Nova Scotia, who dream
of a better life beyond the hardship and unemployment indicative
of the Maritimes. As the movie begins, we see them drive
off into the great unknown that is Toronto, and prosperity.
However, the job and the home they were promised don`t come
through. They are forced to work on the same kinds of jobs
they left home to get away from. One of their jobs is in
a bottling plant, where in a great scene, Pete calculates
how many bottles they stack in a run of a week, suggesting
plainly this job results in nothing. Pete wishes he did
something which would actually create results, the kind
in which everyone would see Pete, as opposed to anyone else,
accomplished this. Despite their best efforts, though, Pete
and Joey see little else but despair in front of them.
Accuracy
is what this film strives for, often to a fault. There is
no way anyone could look at this picture without believing
it is genuinely Canadian, but it is self-consciously so
that it often drains the life out of it. The road is paved
with numerous familiarities or cliches, depending on how
you relate to what`s on screen. The first thing I noticed
was these two Maritimers' accent, which has this almost
confident inability to form the th- sound at the beginning
of the appropriate words. I know myself that I work with
people with this similar peculiarity, and all I think about
is, how difficult could th- be? I grew out of saying dis
and dat in Grade one! We also have, of course, the obligatory
scenes of drinking and associated tomfoolery.
The
most noticeable element of the film is the treatment of
women. The men, and for all I know, the screenwriter as
well, see women as actual people about as well as I comprehend
the new Triple Cheeseburger I`ve heartily eaten from Wendy`s
was once a living, breathing creature. And in one case,
we are treated to a cultural stereotype as well in the presence
of a woman who does payroll at the bottling plant. She is
a youthful French woman named Nicole, with enormously large
breasts and apparently little else, for she is depicted
as nothing more than a sex object to be fawned over. Pete,
amazingly, actually gets a date with this woman, but at
the end of the night is terribly disappointed because Nicole
doesn`t invite him inside for what he hoped would be great
sex. His casual obscenity (guess which one?) is a cold sign
of the attitude prevalent in the picture. Other outings
with women do nothing but bore him, provoking him to say
at one point "All they do is talk, talk, talk!!" And when
Joey does find love, and wants to get married, Pete considers
this an act of betrayal of him and the purpose of finding
success in the big city. A woman can only create hardship.
No mention is made of the possibility that a woman would
more likely be an ally in this struggle, as a man would
be, instead of a liability. Indeed, the ending seems to
be a bit of confirmation for Pete, and a cruel act for any
sensible viewer.
The
essential problem of this film is that it puts more effort
trying to be Canadian than to be a great story. The script
doesn`t have very much bite to it, and misses out on a lot
of opportunities by not following through on anything other
than the obvious. Sure, lots of people probably do what
these characters do, but there is no explanation or psychological
examination of this. Nobody in the script writing department
has the courage to criticize this characters, in the fear
of offending the common folk these characters represent.
This is the Great Canadian experience, so to color these
people with a less than sympathetic eye is akin to treasonous
acts. In a way, this is no different from those Communist
era pictures, promoting the glory of the homeland and the
peasants who keep it going through sheer simplicity. Gosh,
wouldn`t it be wonderful to be like these simple folks:
they work with their hands, create plain conversation, drink
a lot, and use women like cats use scratching posts. God
Save The Queen!
To
be fair, this was a highly praised film in 1970, so much
so that even "Siskel and Ebert" put it on their Top Ten
list for that year. In such a year, a film which actually
depicted the strife of the unemployed and underemployed
would be truly unique, as many other Hollywood and non-Hollywood
films were at the time. But nowadays we would expect something
more, and so while this is valuable as a Canadian cinematic
relic, Goin' Down the Road must be seen for what it is:
a noble but flawed effort.
David
Macdonald
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