The Angels' Share (The Angels' Share)
Contemporary World Cinema - Doha Tribecca Film Festival 2012
Synopsis
Internationally acclaimed British filmmaker Ken Loach brings his subtle comic style to another of his signature social-realist dramas in an engaging, sprightly caper flick that shines an optimistic light on the problems of unemployment and delinquency among British youth. Robbie has been in trouble all his life and has been hauled in front of a judge yet again. About to become a father, he narrowly avoids jail time and is sentenced instead to community service, where he befriends a ragtag circle of rough but charming miscreants. Young offenders can only be trusted so far, of course, and soon they hatch an imaginative plan for a daring heist involving kilts, a trek through the Highlands and one very rare treasure. It’s impossible not to root for these charming underdogs as they hopefully fumble their way to a better future.
About the Director
Born in Nuneaton in 1936, Ken Loach began his career in TV drama, seguing into features in 1967 with ‘Poor Cow’. Films over the past half-century include ‘Kes’ (1969), ‘Riff-Raff’ (1991), ‘Land and Freedom’ (1995), ‘My Name Is Joe’ (1998), ‘Sweet Sixteen’ (2002) and ‘Looking for Eric’ (2009). ‘The Wind That Shakes the Barley’ won Loach the Cannes Palme d’Or in 2006.
Credits
- Director
- Ken Loach
- Screenwriter
- Paul Laverty
- Producer
- Rebecca O’Brien
- Editor
- Jonathan Morris
- Music
- George Fenton
- Cinematographer
- Robbie Ryan
- Distributor
- Teleview International
- Sound
- Ray Beckett
- Set Designer
- Fergus Clegg
- Cast
- Paul Brannigan, Siobhan Reilly, John Henshaw, Gary Maitland, William Ruane, Jasmin Riggins