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A big, BIG letdown...
17 March 2002
Warning: Spoilers
The Full Monty must rank as the most unamusing British comedy ever made (and we have made some distinctly awful ones). The central plot (six men made redundant so strip to make some cash) is patronizing and in the worst taste, as for a film which is considered to be part-comedy, part-social observation it looks at the central characters from an astonishingly right-wing angle.

SPOILER: The character Reg, who auditions for the troupe and fails (He can't "get his kit off properly") is discarded from the film once he has provided a 'laugh' at his situation; the situation being that he has no job, no future and fails at this last-ditch venture. I'm sorry, but I don't find this very amusing.

Only the 'enterprising', Thatcherite characters are successful in this movie, which might well have carried the motto "who dares wins". The Full Monty carries the message that it doesn't matter what ill-fortune comes your way, one must be daring, entepreneurial, and business minded. Not ONCE does the movie cast a glance at the reason why the men are redundant, that isn't on the agenda. It's just the way it is, and one must adapt to it. Again, I didn't find this very funny.

ANOTHER SPOILER: The films condescending outlook is complete in the scene at the JobClub (which is nothing like the real-life JobClubs, these lads get off lightly in comparison) when only one in six men knew what 10 x 1000 was, and even then he took time to do the mental arithmetic. It has become a regular feature in these 'sympathetic' British working-class comedies; the working-class are allowed to drink, smoke, swear and even expose their genitalia, but they are still unable to think.

The final indictment of the film is the hastily drawn characters. They were basically cardboard-cutouts, with Gaz (the 'lad'), Dave (the 'fat one'), Gerald (the 'one with the problems') and three other pointless characters. Robert Carlyle (a fine actor) struggled with such an under-developed character, and other great British actors (Tom Wilkinson and Lesley Sharp) were given little to play with. 'Raining Stones', 'A Room For Romeo Brass', 'Smalltime' and 'Riff Raff' offer social commentary and many belly laughs. The Full Monty tries, but offers neither.
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9/10
A successor to Loach at last...
16 March 2002
Hidden as it was in the BBC schedules, I nearly missed this gem of a film. Shane Meadows seems to improve with every picture, following up the raw promise of 'Small Time' and the almost great 'TwentyFourSeven' with this priceless jewel, which is proof that Meadows alone carries the torch of the British film industry forward amidst the Guy Ritchie pap we churn out on a regular basis.

Although the acting from some of the minor characters was a bit on the dodgy side, Paddy Considine shone as the socially inadequate Morrell and the two lads (and their fathers in a memorably frightening final scene) did a solid job. Credit must also go to the screenwriter Paul Fraser, who has breathed some life into the cliched, patronizing 'working class' sceenplays that featured in 'Brassed Off', or (worse) 'The Full Monty'. The usual 'working class' signifiers (a guest appearance by Kathy Burke, or chain smoking as a character trait) were thankfully missing.

'A Room For Romeo Brass' was an excellent piece of observation. The character Morrell brings back awful memories of acquaintances I had in my youth, and these people still hang around the estate like the foulest of stenches. The film replicated 'life' in a way that Danny Boyle would fail to comprehend.

There were some minor imperfections (for instance, the music was over the top), but Meadows is only 29, he has time to perfect his craft. For everyone disillusioned with British film and its compulsion to chase the dollar, this film will restore that lost faith.
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