I, Daniel Blake
Dir: Ken Loach
2016
2016
*****
Ken Loach announced
his retirement in 2014 following the release of Jimmy's
Hall, a film about Jimmy Gralton, leader of the Revolutionary Workers Group
of the 1930s. He was 78. However, on the news that the Conservative Party had
been re-elected into Government in 2015 and following their controversial 'Fit
for Work' scheme that has since led to countless premature deaths and suicides,
Loach declared he had another film in him, one that he felt was important to
make. I, Daniel Blake is a very
simplistic tale of how real people are effected by the 'Fit for
Work' scheme, Britain's Employment and Support Allowance and the Support
Allowance Work capability Assessment. Loach has used just a few of the many real stories he has collected from
people in similar situations as an example of what people have to go through
during tough times. For years, the British (mainly right-wing) media have
pointed the blame for the country's financial failure at those that claim
sickness and job seekers benefits, with I,
Daniel Blake, Loach explores the
truth of the situation, that many people who have worked all their lives and
have paid their taxes, have been left without any of the benefits that
they are entitled to. The Court of Human Rights have deemed the new scheme
as unlawful, although the government announced they had said otherwise. The
government attempted to hide the real number of those that have actually
died as a result but even when it leaked, the media barely covered it. It is a
stand against the bureaucracy and the cruelty that has been inflicted on
the poor and hardworking by the rich and greedy. It really is that simple, it's
an opinion often mocked but it is an age-old truth. I fear things have got
worse and that people have become numb to other's suffering, as Loach has also
said. Many have stated that I, Daniel Blake is
the Cathy Come Home for the current generation and there is a lot of weight
behind that. Cathy Come Home, a
look at homelessness and the system, had quite the impact when it was released
in 1966 and although certain aspects are different now, it is
eerily similar. How sad and ridiculous is it then that Loach even had
to make I, Daniel Blake, a whole half a century later. The film also
tackles the issue of social housing. I've heard a lot of criticism from
people who actually grew up in social housing, suggesting that
beggars can't be choosers etc but, as we see in the film, people are
being moved across the country to get homes they are entitled to, when years
ago the waiting list was only a couple of days and it would be where you
currently lived. The idea that everyone is on the take is absurd and immoral,
turning our backs on each other is a product of a very sick society. The 1980s
declared that 'Greed is good' but it's not, it's a sickness and it is time we
worked on a cure. Comedian Dave Johns is a bit of perfect casting
by Loach, his performances is direct, no nonsense and without
manipulation. Hayley Squires is also fantastic, the scene whereby she
refuses Daniel Blake's pity and kindness because it will weaken her is a
very simple but astonishing piece of cinema. The film doesn't use emotional
blackmail, it isn't deceitful or manipulative and certainly isn't sensationalist.
That has never been Loach's style or approach. It's the sort of film
that makes everyone angry, no matter what side of the political debate you sit
on. Loach is now eighty years old, my concern is that there isn't a clear
successor to his work, it is tragic that I believe there needs to be. I walked
past at least seven homeless people on the walk between underground station and
office this morning, this is a very real problem and bless Loach and crew
for inserting it into the public's consciousness once more. The best and
most important film of 2016.
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