The idea of an Asian
teenager in the Eighties taking inspiration from Bruce Springsteen sounds
unlikely at first but not only is this film inspired by a true story but if you
look at the Boss’s lyrics they have a universal appeal. Based on Sarfraz
Manzoor’s book `Greetings from Bury Park`,it tells the story of a British
teenager of Pakistani descent whose outlook is transformed when he hears
Springsteen’s music and lyrics for the first time. Conveyed via a striking
sequence in the film it is the words in particular that galvanise Javed into
rebelling against his strict family to become his own person whoever that may
be. If this sounds like a standard rites of passage movie the result is much
more than that. Gurinder Chadha’s film niftily staples Javed’s awakening to the
political times in which he lives. It’s as feelgood a movie as the posters
suggests though in a down to earth manner where Javed’s aspirations start and
end with getting out of Luton, getting a girl and making some money. These may
seem limited ambitions but in a family hamstrung both by tradition and the
economic state of the country plus a swathe of racism swirling around not as
easy as it might sound.
It is set in
1987 which is interesting because at this point Bruce Springsteen was bigger
than ever thanks to the `Born in the USA` album but it’s title song had been
misinterpreted by many as a simple celebration of American life. However the
lyrics speak of hard times and struggle making it ironic that right wing
American politicians of the day would often use it as an anthem. By this time Springsteen
was hardly the sort of rock star to appeal to English teenagers of any background; he was more
“like the music your Dad listens to” as one character puts it. Yet Bruce’s
lyrics spoke to the outsider in society and in the mid 80s you couldn’t get
much more `outside` than being part of an immigrant family in recession hit UK.
The film is doused in incidents of casual racism that were par for the course
back then and this is allied with headlines and news snippets of factories
closing, families on the breadline and so on; exactly the material that
inspired Springsteen’s classic songs.
Rather like
films about computers, movies about music have certain familiarities but this
one neatly skips round most of these. The keynote scene mentioned earlier when Javed
first listens to the Boss is one of – if not the- best cinematic interpretation
of the effect music can have on a teenager I’ve ever seen. Impressionistic
flourishes rely on the locale- shadows and lighting- and it matches the power
of the music and lyrics by having the words float on the screen, almost
encouraging us all to sing along. This visual trick is used several times later
and helps match Springsteen’s visions with 80s Luton in a way you’d never
imagine. It’s not a musical though so headphones are handily used to bring the
music to us. When there’s a sort of musical number it is natural and quite
amusing while the trio of kids running through the streets to `Born to Run` is
wonderfully simple yet powerful (and took three weeks to shoot!)
The film
contains a lot of characters, a lot of happenings but it’s mostly corralled
with precision to underscore the important points. This does mean some close
editing- early on there are a couple of cuts were you can almost sense the
editor’s hand moving things along. One character who suffers from this is Roops
who befriends Javed when he goes to sixth form college and is the person who
actually introduces him to Springsteen’s music. Yet we find next to nothing out
about him; in the end it is Aaron Phagura’s performance that keeps him in the picture
but the character is thinly sketched. Also, Javed’s hitherto best mate Matt (a
lively, funny Dean Charles Chapman) is ushered to the sidelines in the final
run in after an excellent scene in which he responds in a suprising way against Javed’s new
found freedom of expression. And there’s Hayley Attwell’s inquisitive, caring
teacher Ms Clay who makes bold gestures on Javed's behalf but whose part dwindles
later. It would be nice to maybe see some edited material when this
gets released to buy or stream but in the meantime you can see why the choices
were made.
Also it allows
the important father / son relationship to flourish in some very well written
and played scenes between them. Though circumstances were changed from what
actually happened, you can sense a real authenticity in their relationship
which neither falls too far into strict Dad/ rebellious kid territory (Javed’s
`rebellion` is too polite for that) nor uses religion as a catch-all excuse
either way. In these kind of dramas not enough attention is always paid to the
adults who can come across as caricatures but here they are allowed a voice and
a view that is as valid as the kids’ ones. We’re never encouraged to take sides
unless we’re seeing the uglier side of eighties society whether incidents of in
your face racism or images of dole queues and riot police
The narrative
successfully roots its story firmly in the times without any modern retconning
of behaviour. It pulls no punches yet never gets carried way. Its non-
judgmental too, nudging the audience forward while enjoying wrong footing the
viewer in the best way possible. So Javed’s seemingly conformist straight
laced sister turns out to be more free spirited than she seems; there’s a sweet
friendship between them that makes a refreshing change. Likewise the film does
a good job contrasting Javed’s musical awakening with Matt’s dogged following
of the latest trends. A less well composed film might have had Matt become a Bruce
fan but he never does probably because his dad really is a Springsteen fan
(there’s a fun spin off in my head about Matt and his dad!) Eliza’s socialist
principles are never a bone of contention for Javed as they could be; he sits
through a dinner with her parents gauche behaviour without saying a word out of
place himself. Best of all are Javed’s own parents; here the film largely
avoids the `strict Muslim` stereotype so we understand why Javed’s father seems
hard on his kids. His own ambitions, often thwarted, echo exactly the sort of
working class ethos in Springsteen lyrics inspiring Javed. On a lighter note we’re
reminded how strong the tribalism of musical genres.
Not that this
is a serious maudlin affair by any means. Matching the rallying cry of
Springsteen’s songs the film underscores his central message that you have to
try to `run`, to escape and make the best of what’s around. The film never
suggests that there are answers to those problems, just ways round them. Like
Springsteen, it is down to earth yet that doesn’t stop you dreaming of,
striving for better times ahead.
In the lead
role Viveik Kalra makes some strong, interesting choices as Javed’s rebellion
is never going to burn down buildings but his sense of contained frustration
bubbles up as matter progress. He carries the character’s shyness and
newly discovered insight equally well. His father is played with conviction by Kulvinder Ghir
who makes us respect him even when he is clearly wrong. There’s a strong role
too for Nell Williams as Javed’s prospective girlfriend Eliza while Nikita
Mehta is excellent as Javed’s sister.
It’s a cracking
cast all round actually that bring the Eighties to life so vividly that you
stop gawking at the huge period haircuts (Rob Brydon as Matt’s father has a
corker of a barnet!) and shoulder pads! There’s lovely period detail yet they
don’t forget how drab that decade could be. People do seem to dress more
extravagantly during harder times and there’s enough hairspray, big jackets and
bangles here to perfectly convey the era.
Yes it might
have been more radical but it does more than enough to reach a point that when
Javed’s father is attacked you will gasp and want to look away. And if there’s
anything more joyous than that Born to Run sequence in the cinema this year I’ll
be surprised.
I suppose this
is a film for optimists who, like Springsteen (and Javed), believe in striving
for better times however difficult things are right now. It may not have
answers but that’s for politicians and activists; what it does do is entertain
and inspire as strongly as anything. I love it!
Here's the trailer....
The song!
Though penned
by the Boss, `Blinded by the Light` came to wider attention as a hit for Manfred
Mann’s Earthband in 1976 / 7 when it topped the US charts and made the top 10
in the UK. Mann was a regular coverer of Bruce Springsteen songs and the latter
once commented favourably on these outings. Manfred’s version includes a
snipper of `Chopsticks` in the middle!
Yet what the
MMEB version did not do was clarify the obscure lyrics especially the second
line of the chorus which appears to say something like “revved up like a douche
and a runner in the night”. Turns out the word is deuce as in the two seater car.
Springsteen’s original says “cut loose like a deuce” which scans better.
The lyrics
conjure up a roster of bizarre characters such as “madman drummers”, “go-kart
Mozart” and “some silicon sisters”. What
is all means is another matter’; theories have suggested it could be about drug
running but in fact it appears it is about Bruce’s childhood and adolescence- a
jumble of mixed up memories he lyricised courtesy of a rhyming dictionary. So
it is an appropriate title then for a movie about adolescence then!
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