Scottish writer and former vocalist for the punk band the Skids, Richard Jobson makes his directorial debut with 16 Years of Alcohol, the stylized psychological drama based on his own semi-autobiographical novel. Through voice-over narration and various flashback methods, troubled young man Frankie Mac (Kevin McKidd) recalls his childhood (played by Iain De Caestaecker as a boy) growing up in working-class Edinburgh. In the '50s, his father (Lewis McCloud) was a hard-drinking good-timer and his long-suffering mother (Lisa May Cooper) eventually gave up on the family. As a teenager in the '70s, the violent Frankie falls in with a street gang and tries to clean up to impress record store clerk Helen (Laura Fraser). After some fights with his old street thug enemy Miller (Stuart Sinclair Blyth), Frankie makes an another attempt to stop drinking at an AA meeting, where he meets Mary (Susan Lynch). ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi
The beginning storyline was slow and dull yet by the time I understood the necessity of those scenes I couldn't understand the way they talked for the entire movie.
I liked this movie because it represents the real skinhead not the racist people tend to associate the word with. It really doesnt dive into the subculture but uses it as a backdrop to tell the story of a man struggling with violence and alcohol. It shows how love can make you do crazy things. I like this movie but it can get a bit confusing.
joined this online service specifically with this movie in mind, touted "A Clockwork Orange meets Trainspotting". Sounded right up my alley but it most definitely was not the case. I didn't see the connection at all, maybe I needed to really use my imagination. Dialect somewhat difficult to understand, which in itself wouldn't have been a problem but I just didn't see the the significance of alcohol in the protagonists life, moreso violence than anything else. Plot was boring and disjointed and left out key scenes before jumping back into his adulthood (jumped from adulthood to childhood) which seemed notworthy to the plot had they been followed through. I wouldn't want to see it again and I'm a recovering alcoholic!
The beginning storyline was slow and dull yet by the time I understood the necessity of those scenes I couldn't understand the way they talked for the entire movie.
I liked this movie because it represents the real skinhead not the racist people tend to associate the word with. It really doesnt dive into the subculture but uses it as a backdrop to tell the story of a man struggling with violence and alcohol. It shows how love can make you do crazy things. I like this movie but it can get a bit confusing.