Film
What's on at the cinema plus reviews of the latest movie and DVD releases
The Great Ecstasy of Robert Carmichael (2005)
Director: Thomas Clay
Movie review
From Time Out London
It’s October, 2003. Robert Carmichael (Dan Spencer) is a GCSE pupil in a run-down south coast fishing town. A talented cellist but socially introverted, he hangs around with easygoing Ben (Charles Mnene) and bad seed Joe (Ryan Winsley), whose worse-seed cousin (Danny Dyer) is out on parole. As the invasion of Iraq rumbles along in the background, small town ennui develops into something much, much worse.Mixing attempts at social realism, political comment, painterly composition and gross ultraviolence, ‘The Great Ecstasy of Robert Carmichael’ is undeniably ambitious and attention-grabbing, but it’s also ham-fisted and facile. The fragmented narrative slowly pieces itself together, flitting from one character to another in lengthy, often static or slow-panning long and medi-um shots. Evidently calculated as an alienation effect, this approach serves the photography well – Angelopoulos’s longtime cinematographer Yorgos Arvanitis brings the same grey-green drear to Newhaven’s glowering scenery as to its drab interiors, whose tableaux of figures slumped before screens convey a certain theatrical claustrophobia – but it offers no purchase on characters described by the director as ‘cogs’ and left even more hollow by a flat cast and terribly tin-eared dialogue.
Clay has said his film has ‘no pretence at realism’, but nor does it have any real sense of drama or political resonance. The parallels suggested between state violence – the Iraq misadventure, the Second World War – and the two prolonged, viciously misogynistic assaults around which the film pivots are especially offensively trite. The resulting story has the feel of a media studies project like the one featured in the film and referred to in its production notes as ‘a stilted morality play’.
Author: Ben Walters
Time Out London Issue 1887: October 17-24 2006
Cast & crew
Director: Thomas Clay
Cast: Danny Dyer, Ryan Winsley, Charles Mnene, Daniel Spencer full cast
Genre(s): Drama
Rated: 18
Duration: 98 mins
UK Release: Oct 20 2006
Most popular on this site
Top Stories
Time Out's 101 Films of the Decade
Ten years, thousands of movies and millions of dollars in international box office, and it all boils down to this
Martin Provost discusses 'Séraphine'
Trevor Johnston talks to the director of 'Séraphine' about bringing a little known French painter back to life
Our verdict on Peter Jackson's The Lovely Bones
Peter Jackson ends a triumphant decade with a sentimental misfire with this lush Alice Sebold adaptation
On the set of Ken Loach's 'Route Irish'
Dave Calhoun meets Ken Loach on the set of his forthcoming Iraq war movie
Stephen Poliakoff discusses 'Glorious 39'
Stephen Poliakoff’s ‘Glorious 39’ is his first film for cinema since ‘Food of Love’ in 1997. Dave Calhoun met him
Is 'Paranormal Activity' the new 'Blair Witch'?
How does a film go from DIY experiment to box-office smash? 'Paranormal Activity' director Oren Peli explains
Steven Soderbergh on 'The Informant!' and 'The Girlfriend Experience'
We talk to Steven Soderbergh about his two forthcoming films: one featuring a porn star, the other a chubby Matt Damon
A gateway to all things 'New Moon'
In anticipation of 'The Twilight Saga: New Moon', Time Out is offering the chance to pick up a limited edition pack with three exclusive magazines and a free poster.
The films that deserve a TV spin-off
With Roland Emmerich suggesting he'd like to make a '2012' TV spin-off, we propose some more movie-to-TV serialisations
Time Out's 50 greatest animated films with commentary by Terry Gilliam
In celebration of the release of Pixar's 'Up' and Wes Anderson's 'Fantastic Mr Fox', read our rundown of fifty classic feature length animations












What do you think?
Post your review now