Looking For Eric - DVD
Directed by: Ken Loach
Year - 2009
Running time: approx 116 minutes
Certificate: 15
'Orse went t bar - bar-man said why the long face?'
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Two brass monkeys for the budget of this English cinematic experience, several lets get ... Read review
A man trying to put his life back on track gets some advice from an unexpected benefactor ... more
in this comedy-drama from acclaimed British director Ken Loach. Eric Bishop (Steve Evets) is a postman living in Manchester whose life has been slowly going off the rails ever since his wife Lily (Stephanie Bishop) walked out on him. Eric has just been released from the hospital after an auto accident, and comes home to a house that's a mess and two teenage sons, Ryan (Gerard Kearns) and Jess (Stefan Gumbs), who regard their dad as an annoyance rather than an authority figure. Eric's oldest child, a grown daughter named Sam (Lucy-Jo Hudson), loves him but can't get her mother or brothers to show him any respect. And his friends from work don't know what to do for him, except allow him to talk about football and his favourite team, Manchester United. One night, Eric is home alone, smoking some weed, and to his amazement he's visited by an apparition of Eric Cantona, the French footballer who was a star for Manchester United in the 1990s until he retired and dropped out of sight. Cantona's ghost has come to give Eric a pep talk and offer him some advice on how to win Lily back, and as Eric tries to convince his wife to give him another chance, Cantona periodically appears to coach him in the ways of romance. LOOKING FOR ERIC was an official selection at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival.
A man trying to put his life back on track gets some advice from an unexpected benefactor ... more
in this comedy-drama from acclaimed British director Ken Loach. Eric Bishop (Steve Evets) is a postman living in Manchester whose life has been slowly going off the rails ever since his wife Lily (Stephanie Bishop) walked out on him. Eric has just been released from the hospital after an auto accident, and comes home to a house that's a mess and two teenage sons, Ryan (Gerard Kearns) and Jess (Stefan Gumbs), who regard their dad as an annoyance rather than an authority figure. Eric's oldest child, a grown daughter named Sam (Lucy-Jo Hudson), loves him but can't get her mother or brothers to show him any respect. And his friends from work don't know what to do for him, except allow him to talk about football and his favourite team, Manchester United. One night, Eric is home alone, smoking some weed, and to his amazement he's visited by an apparition of Eric Cantona, the French footballer who was a star for Manchester United in the 1990s until he retired and dropped out of sight. Cantona's ghost has come to give Eric a pep talk and offer him some advice on how to win Lily back, and as Eric tries to convince his wife to give him another chance, Cantona periodically appears to coach him in the ways of romance. LOOKING FOR ERIC was an official selection at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival.
Production Year: 2004 - Drama - Director: Nick Cassavetes - Original Language: English - Classification: 15 years and over, 12 years and over - Starring: Rachel McAdams, Ryan Gosling, Gena Rowlands
Production Year: 2000 - Drama - Director: Giuseppe Tornatore - Original Language: Italian - Classification: 15 years and over - Starring: Monica Bellucci, Giuseppe Sulfaro, Luciano Federico, Matilde Piana
Advantages: Raw Humanism - bare naked Disadvantages: YouTube idea
'''Looking For Eric - DVD''' _Directed by: Ken Loach_ _Year - 2009_ _Running time: approx 116 minutes_ _Certificate: 15_
''''Orse went t bar - bar-man said why the long face?'''' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Two brass monkeys for the budget of this English cinematic experience, several lets get the local bar in on the act scenes, a run-down house full of wood-worm tiny cubby-holes and ... ...Socrates, not the Brazilian Soccer star. A load of best mates with semi funny gaffs, and there you have it a Director Ken Loach in his local pub watching Sky Sports.
This is so 'Brassed Off' styled that all that was missing was a trombone and a triangle. It may take longer to read this review than to get grasp of the Ken Loach story-board. Loach a Football supporter himself could easily have mistaken his diary as the narrative concept ... more
Looking For Eric - DVD Directed by: Ken Loach Year - 2009 Running time: approx 116 minutes Certificate: 15
'Orse went t bar - bar-man said why the long face?' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Two brass monkeys for the budget of this English cinematic experience, several lets get the local bar in on the act scenes, a run-down house full of wood-worm tiny cubby-holes and dirty sheets, a washed-up ex-Manchester legend feeling his way around Socrates, not the Brazilian Soccer star. A load of best mates with semi funny gaffs, and there you have it a Director Ken Loach in his local pub watching Sky Sports.
This is so 'Brassed Off' styled that all that was missing was a trombone and a triangle. It may take longer to read this review than to get grasp of the Ken Loach story-board. Loach a Football supporter himself could easily have mistaken his diary as the narrative concept when he sent it off to Steve Evets to read; who plays the leading role as Eric Bishop.
Bishop, is a do not mess with me, especially when I've had 25 pints of Fosters which I gulp down in halves kind of guy. It does take a while for the penny to drop down and hit the Pacific sea-bed with him; but he is a loyal man, hard working and does nothing selfless. He is existing, just about, he his at the baker's door asking for piece of spam. He has hit rock bottom. Depression has resided within Bishop, whose only escape apart from rocking back and forth in a Postal sorting office is his beloved Manchester United; and even attending a match at Old Trafford has become a distant memory for him. Locked in the 1992 -1996 era with the likes of Hughes, Kanchelskis, Irvin, Keane, McClair and of course the magician Cantona. He searches for solace; and it comes in the form of Eric Cantona. I was half expecting Clair Raynor with a blue rinse, hence the budget and all, but alas we were graced with the eloquent David Niven of Englishness, Kung-Fu kicker Eric Cantona. All bearded up and with the seagulls still.
Loach was feeding bar snacks to the seagulls, I thought when he came up with this piece of inspiration in adding Cantona to the script; even though he is football mad about 'Bath' I felt he did hold back on the amount of football footage; so you can you're your better halves and not feel guilty at prosecuting them to some footie action. - You may even be surprised at hearing their chants of 'Oh ahhh Cantona, oh ha Cantona......oh ahhh Cantona' and repeat; quite a catchy tune, if your tone deaf, from being in the terraces week upon week. Loach's mix of slight undertones of political stances and deprivation combined with fanatical language is stomach worthy for all social groups.
Clever glances of humor stroked with hardships, is a notable ingredient within the script. Bishop's relationship with his ex-missus 'Lily' played by Stephanie Bishop was like watching blossom on a tree. Delicately, awkward, wondering if anything was going to materialize. Evets portrayal of a man, who once ran away from his problems, now had to confront them; mainly due to the fact they had all come home to roost in his home; in a mist of cannabis smoke, and his step-sons teenage reality checks, by mixing with wrong crowds with fierce dogs and big threats that put Eric and his step-sons at risk. Bishop induced with cannabis and away with the fairies, he confided in his super hero Eric Cantona. - Loach's approach on mental illness is well informed and his use of turning the split-personality caused by such drugs to a positive means is typical of Loach for going beyond what is actually there. A seriousness of the condition is a testimony to this piece of work. On one hand you have the bulbous jovial language of pub life in the lounge, with Manchester United playing on a 72" screen with true comrades and mickey taking that goes too far after a few bevies and then the stark contrast of resolving problems by wanting to express his feelings to 'Lily' and be on par with the great French Philosopher 'Cantona'. Suppose you have to be on some type of chemical to understand him.
Bishop's departure from reality is seen as refreshing and by viewing hardships via a different perspective is deemed as a positive move. What I admired about Cantona's role is he looks now to have forfeited his grave poetic license, and embraced dark-humor in abundance. Not that he was a Lord Byron of literacy, you got the impression he saw 'Looking for Eric' as a turning point in his route to find other ventures. ' A seagull, can always change course to find the salmon.' - His interpretation of Eric Cantona the life-coach, was like watching a Rom-Seal advert. 'It does exactly what it says on the tin'. His parables were used as gospel for Bishop and saw him through his disillusioned period.
John Henshaw acted as 'Meatballs' and was Bishop's best friend. Brashly and in a controlling manner, along with banter and one liners that would grace all the bars across 'workingmen clubs' in the UK, John Henshall ticked all the right boxes. Loud, Heavy-handed, 18 stone and a true gritty lad, with Beer and Comradeship tattooed on his meaty brain. This year has been a busy year for him work-wise as many Directors have been seduced by the immense size of his talent. Lock-up the 'Pukka pies!! - If there ever would be a film about 'John Prescott, out on a lash, playing away from home' - Henshaw is the man. Pure genius. _ Now you know lasses this isn't a footie film. There were more pork scratching and pickled eggs than there were scenes of Ronaldo's greased locks.
Escapism is rife, everywhere you turn, yet the focus swaps around as Bishop meets his tormentors head-on with some help from his friends, spurred on by 'Meatballs'. - Loach's message ' A problem shared is a problem halved'. - the strength of realism across the scripts is supreme; bad language deplored petty violence, the love and understanding of a timid women, life extremities and the loyalty of comrades. And I've not mentioned Eric. - Cantona, appeared to be the lettuce in a BLT, for me. A little limp but overall not the main substance. Meatball's is my stapled diet. Humanism is a pledge for Loach's work; he would make a librarian's life crossed with a brothel interesting. Wafer thin Evets' a legend, though I would prescribe a dietary requirement of 'meatballs'.
Advantages: Some great acting; very funny; just hugely enjoyable Disadvantages: Cantona's sometimes inpenetrable accent; lack of realism in some parts
Film only review
When depressed postman Eric is forced to come face to face with the woman he abandoned thirty years earlier, his already fragile mental state takes a turn for the worse. Eric lives with his two step sons from his second marriage but his second wife is long gone, leaving Eric to look after the two idle tearaways who have turned the house into a place to store stolen goods and for their equally unpleasant friends to doss down for the night. Seeing that Eric is feeling low, his friends try to help him out and one of them, Meatballs, brings round a self-help manual which recommends imagining you are someone you really admire in order to raise your self-worth. Eric thinks of his idol, the former Manchester United number seven Eric Cantona so you can imagine his surprise when a few days later Cantona turns up at the house ...
Advantages: Amazing guitaring, classic tunes, good sound Disadvantages: no dramatics apart from the playing
and a cover of Hendrix's Are You Experienced.
The duration of the music is 1 hour.
Sit back and watch guitar virtuosity at its very finest. Eric seems to be at his prime on the DVD at 35 years of age and the Civil War clothing looks the part aswell.
Enjoy the DVD
Ben ...
Advantages: Can switch off the commentary, split into manageable sections, moves are easy to pick up Disadvantages: Music can get a bit boring and repetitive
on and really get into the music without the voices in the way! Also, if you have neighbours they won't start worrying about all the "encouraging" comments coming from your room!
The routines are led by the main host Deanne Berry and her seven assistants and it is performed on the same location as the video for Eric Prydz's 'Call On Me' - so yes, expect some very cheesy sexy moves. Naturally, the host does it the best but I found the background dancers particularly amusing, as some of them are trying so hard to be sexy and there is one single man (is that Eric?) who looks a bit out of place. Given that most people watching the DVD will be straight women, I'm not sure the sexy glances help - but I suppose they get you in the mood!
The workouts themselves are split up into neat sections comprising of: a warm up, three different dance workouts ...
Acclaimed British filmmaker Ken Loach (CATHY COME HOME, THE WIND THAT SHAKES THE BARLEY) directs this heartfelt drama in which disaffected postman Eric finds his life in turmoil when he returns home after a near-fatal car crash. Unable to connect with his estranged family or come to terms with his shambolic existence, Eric seeks solace in drugs. High one evening, the football-mad postie is visited by ex-Manchester United ace Eric Cantona, with the charismatic Frencman offering the hapless Eric advice on how to overcome his problems...
Release details
DVD Region
DVD
Studio(s)
ICON HOME ENTERTAINMENT; UNIVERSAL MUSIC OPERATIONS
Languages
Main Language
English
Technical information
Special Features
Director's commentary, Trailer, Short Films, Q and A, Music video
Aspect Ratio
16:9 Anamorphic Wide Screen
Sound
Dolby Digital
Professional reviews
Review
This is endearing, crowd-pleasing fare (Daily Telegraph, 21/05/2009)
A lovably good-natured if erratic comedy (The Guardian, 21/05/2009)
Ken Loach couldn't have painted a more perfect, bitter-sweet picture for Cannes (The Times, 21/05/2009)
[LOOKING FOR ERIC] has many incidental pleasures (Variety, 21/05/2009)
DVD Description
A man trying to put his life back on track gets some advice from an unexpected benefactor in this comedy-drama from acclaimed British director Ken Loach. Eric Bishop (Steve Evets) is a postman living in Manchester whose life has been slowly going off the rails ever since his wife Lily (Stephanie Bishop) walked out on him. Eric has just been released from the hospital after an auto accident, and comes home to a house that's a mess and two teenage sons, Ryan (Gerard Kearns) and Jess (Stefan Gumbs), who regard their dad as an annoyance rather than an authority figure. Eric's oldest child, a grown daughter named Sam (Lucy-Jo Hudson), loves him but can't get her mother or brothers to show him any respect. And his friends from work don't know what to do for him, except allow him to talk about football and his favourite team, Manchester United. One night, Eric is home alone, smoking some weed, and to his amazement he's visited by an apparition of Eric Cantona, the French footballer who was a star for Manchester United in the 1990s until he retired and dropped out of sight. Cantona's ghost has come to give Eric a pep talk and offer him some advice on how to win Lily back, and as Eric tries to convince his wife to give him another chance, Cantona periodically appears to coach him in the ways of romance. LOOKING FOR ERIC was an official selection at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival.
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