6/10
Slightly Disappointing
23 August 2012
After waiting to see this movie after years of reading about its critical acclaim, I found the script a bit disappointing. Here is a film that is often touted for its "ahead of its time" dealings with racial and gay subject matter, but I found nothing ahead of its time with regards to the dialogue for either subject.

Young Jo and her mother are poor white trash residents of working class England living a nomadic gypsy life together, constantly arguing and insulting each other so frequently, you wonder how and why they live together. Mom gets behind in the rent and they duck out on the landlord first opportunity, wandering to wherever Mom finds her next male friend. Young Jo eventually meets a young good-looking black Merchant sailor who has stable employment and seems to have more on the ball than both Jo or her Mom. They develop a romance over a few days - not a "one night stand" - as descriptions often state. They profess their love for each other and the sailor gives Jo a friendship ring. The sailor departs when his ship sails on a scheduled trip, but at their meeting on the pier before it departs, he asks her to remember him and promises to return.

In his absence, her loneliness returns until she meets up with Geoffrey, a gay male who eventually moves in with her and her mother. Jo later discovers she is pregnant with the sailor's child, then inexplicably asks Geoffrey to serves as the father of the sailor's child. He agrees. Apparently, Jo has evaluated the prospects of raising a mixed race child in Britain along with maybe assessing her own personal prejudices about maintaining a lifelong relationship with its father, and decided she will be better off cutting all ties with the child's father. Strangely, this decision is made with no consultation or consideration for the father who by every indication in the film, planned to return to her when his ship completed its voyage (he is from Liverpool). Unfortunately for Jo, as the constant family bickering continues, both her mother (who marries her latest beau and moves into his house) and Geoffrey both leave her in a lurch, pregnant and alone, and she is left to contemplate her future.

What's comical in the film is that Jo and her mother have all the characteristics of white trash demographic, yet Jo frequently refers to the neighborhood kids as "filthy" and "dirty" as if she was somehow better and both her and her mother seem to look at the child's father as sufficient for a night of sex and comfort, but unworthy as a life partner. This is more an indictment of the attitudes of these two women and general British society rather than any deficiency of the child's father. The film is silent on with whom the fault lies, and the viewer is left to decide whether the fault lies in the stars or in Jo herself.

For those who associate the movie with the song of the same name, two things: (1) The song is not part of the soundtrack and apparently was written - as many songs have been over the years - to both benefit from and serve as a promotion vehicle for the film. (2) We often expect a movie that has a great song title to measure up to the popularity and quality of the song, such as 1944's "Laura," where both song and movie are equal and eternal classics. That doesn't happen here. The movie comes up short comparatively speaking vis a vis the well known and exceedingly popular song written by composer Bobby Scott.
6 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed