Shame (18)

Film

Drama

Shame

Shame

Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>3/5
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Time Out says

Sun Sep 4 2011

The British artist Steve McQueen stormed the film world in 2008 with ‘Hunger’, his film about the death of IRA hunger striker Bobby Sands. His second film, ‘Shame’, sees Michael Fassbender as a New York bachelor who has a complicated relationship with his sexuality and Carey Mulligan as the younger sister who imposes a rare visit on his Manhattan life. It’s a slightly more conventional film than ‘Hunger’ (no extended floor-washing scenes here) but no less courageous or probing in its investigation of the extremes of human behaviour.

You may hear this described as a film about sex addiction, but that makes ‘Shame’ sound like an ‘issue’ film, which it isn’t. It’s a character study about a man whose sex drive is an outlet for unspoken, unknown agonies. Fassbender is Brandon, a casually slick, charming but reticent man who lives alone in an ordered, characterless flat and works in an aggressively male corporate environment. Away from the stark routines of his working life, he enjoys random encounters with women (and, once, a man), hires prostitutes, indulges in porn and masturbates at work. His ease masks troubles at which this story, set over just a few days, only hints.

McQueen frames episodes in Brandon’s life in a steely, unflinching style, neither gratuitous nor coy. He takes us into various bedrooms and under various sheets but sidesteps eroticism even when bums and breasts are bouncing furiously. There are scenes of startling intensity, such as when Brandon catches the eye of a stranger on a train and we follow their intricate rush-hour flirtation or when we catch him jogging through the city in a single shot. There’s one virtuoso sequence in which McQueen cuts between a fight outside a bar, its aftermath and the flirty encounter that precipitates it.

Brandon’s volatile sister, Sissy (Mulligan), comes to stay, and their relationship is awkward. She thinks nothing of taking Brandon's married work colleague (James Badge Dale) back to her brother’s apartment and bed. Brandon holds her at a distance, yet Sissy crawls under his duvet at night seeking comfort (he screams at her to leave), and when she disturbs him wanking in his bathroom he rushes out in anger and leaps on her, naked apart from a towel around his waist. Mulligan has a mesmerising scene in which she sings a slow version of ‘New York, New York’ in a city bar and McQueen lingers long on her face. You imagine that she and Brandon shared a trauma as kids – but imagining is all we can do. McQueen gives little away. He wants us to judge behaviour not backstories.

The film leaves us with a sense of cycles repeating. There’s a welcome absence of closure, although it’s a shame McQueen and writer Abi Morgan are not bold enough to leave Brandon and Sissy’s immediate story hanging in the same way: they round off with an event that is too conclusive for the film that precedes it. An alternative, subtler climax lies tantalisingly close.

That might trouble in the moment, but it doesn’t sink the film. Far from it. Like ‘Hunger’, ‘Shame’ is interested in the stark immediacy of one man’s world and drawing us into that world without easy explanations. It’s a work that feels, both for our times and of them. It reconfirms McQueen as a filmmaker with an unflinching, microscopic gaze on the world.
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Release details

Rated:

18

UK release:

Fri Jan 13 2012

Duration:

99 mins

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 3/5 (44 ratings)
  • Some people are talking about redemption or lack there of. This movie doesn't offer it because it is centered around two characters who don't find redemption. It is set around a few days of their life and is an honest portrait of their flaws and struggle for a normal existence (if there is such a thing) If a movie is true and honest it doesn't need a happy ending, It is the truth to the story and character that makes it special. For me the movie was difficult to watch at times but not in a bad way. Films about character filled with honesty and tragedy (which is as true to life as it gets) are probably my favorite, even if they are difficult to watch.

    Jamie Tue Jan 1
    Rated as: 4/5
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  • A brave, unflinching examination of sexual addiction. Mercifully short, the film manages to entertain despite its grim subject matter . a man's inability to make an emotional connection . . and a woman's inability to deal with her destructive impulses. The film uses music rather than dialogue to create mood and although slow--paced at times it nevertheless succeeds in its portrayal of a man trying to combat his compulsive behaviour. Performances from the principals are excellent.

    John Cooper Wed Oct 24 2012
    Rated as: 4/5
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  • Did you guys realize, that at the begging of the movie the woman on the train had both engagement and wedding ring, but at the end she only had engagement rig, what do you guys think of that, what could that mean ????

    Askar Fri Oct 5 2012
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  • It seems that most people who have hated this movie didn't know anything about sex addiction. Sex addiction is a real disease. But if you don't have it it is difficult to understand. Just like alcoholism would be for someone who has never heard about it. "Why do they drink ? Why can't they enjoy life ? They are crazy ! I would never do that... " or even "they are just enjoying life, what's the problem ?" The problem is addictions. Just open a book and learn about it.

    trip Fri Aug 17 2012
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  • Are you all kidding? The script was lacking, there was no viable narrative and the acting was atrocious. This is nothing less than a little pervert of a writers fantasy. For god sake don't pay for this dross, it's just a little something to give the pointless critics something to bore everyone with. This meaningless poop of a film was a bit like waiting for a fish to sneeze!

    Pursuivent Sun May 27 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • I thought the movie was brilliant. I do have one question for anyone who can answer.. What do you guys think the film was trying to say about marriage? There was several emphases on marriage; (i.e showing the woman on the trains wedding ring, his talk on the date about marriage, the anger he showed towards his sister for sleeping with his married boss) I'm interested to hear what anyone thinks of this!

    Selena Fri May 25 2012
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  • Just saw this film tonight. I hadn't read anything about it beforehand just had heard of the film title. I have to say it blew me away. Am a little disappointed about some of the negative comments but each to their own. The sex scenes are part of the film and part of its beauty illustrating the intensities of the feelings of Brandon. What is more memoriable to me is the music score how beautifully it is woven I to the whole film just so perfectly. The last 25 mins of the film doesnt have dialogue with haunting music that depicts the emyotion and intensities of the main character from soothing to manic to soothing to self loathing. The whole film can be summed up in one simple line for me 'We're not bad people. We just come from a bad place' (Sissy) The cinematography is just gorgeous too. I have to say this is the best surprise film I have seen in a long time. One of those that just hits you so so hard when least expecting it. I expect the Freud students may have different views of this film. Well thank you Mr McQueen the cast and crew for such a thought provoking masterpiece.

    Marko Sat Apr 28 2012
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • It is clear everyone here is not artistic or thoughtful enough to enjoy this film.

    Jill Thu Apr 26 2012
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • What are we to believe .. I know for sure half of us are still up in the trees! Mindless sex ... what could be more unsatisfying? Glad I did not waste money seeing this in a movie house. Truly awful .. sure there must have been an awful childhood but that is no excuse for him giving into his addiction .. and not fun to observe ... and what is the point of this film I ask? Can anyone tell me???

    Sylvia S Thu Apr 26 2012
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  • The movie started out good, until the bathroom scene with him staring at his naked sister and her not trying to cover herself. I think Brandon's problem has something more to do with his past growing up with his sister...

    julyienn taylor Sun Apr 22 2012
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