Yet
another film in the Full Monty mould--about men seeking
dignity and meaning after losing their jobs--this engaging
film has a thoughtful, witty tone that makes it worth seeing
even if it feels a bit simplistic.
Frank (Mullan)
is a 55-year-old Glaswegian, made redundant when his shipyard
closes. He's never recovered from the death of his son years
ago, which has strained his relationship with his wife (Blethyn)
and surviving son (Sives), who's now a father himself. His
passion is swimming with his pals (Boyd, McGinley and Cook),
so he hatches a secret plan to swim the English Channel,
and to achieve something in a world that seems to have passed
him by.
This is the kind
of film that sinks or swims (sorry!) in its performances
and in the filmmakers' ability to avoid syrupy sentiment.
Fortunately, everyone maintains an open-hearted honesty
while avoiding too much sap. When the emotion comes, the
film has earned it, simply because the characters are so
believable. Mullan, as always, finely captures Frank's shattered
emptiness and tenacious pursuit of what looks like a pointless
goal. And he's very strongly supported by the entire cast.
Sives has the most interesting role, as a young man who
can't escape the pain of his past and yet still loves life.
And Boyd is good fun in the comic relief role, which is
rather simplistically goofy but gives the film a badly needed
shot of cheeky energy.
Director Dellal
and cinematographer David Johnson shoot the film beautifully,
skilfully catching the natural beauty. But the elegiac tone
is almost undermined by corny TV-movie music and some wobbly
editing that includes hokey montages and lots of whispy
flashbacks. These are rather overdone and also annoyingly
elusive, since Dellal and writer Rose take their time telling
us exactly what happened to create all this familial tension.
Fortunately, the central relationships--father and son,
husband and wife--are strong enough to overcome this. And
a willingness to let the characters be fairly unlikeable
actually adds grit and verve to the film, and makes the
final sequence surprisingly thrilling.
On A Clear Day Cast:
Peter Mullan, Brenda Blethyn, Jamie Sives, Billy Boyd,
Sean McGinley, Ron Cook, Jodhi May, Anne Marie Timoney,
Benedict Wong, Paul Ritter, Shaun Dingwall, Tony Roper