Ken Loach’s Kes (1969)

I’m from York­shire and, like all York­shire men and women, am very proud to be so (you may have encoun­tered this prob­a­bly not-unan­noy­ing phe­nom­e­non if you’re not your­self from York­shire). The coun­ty is known for the rugged beau­ty of its Dales in the north-west, and its Wolds and Moors in the north-east, though it is asso­ci­at­ed too, in the west and south, with a bleak­er, more indus­tri­al land­scape, where social depri­va­tion and pover­ty has played its part. One such area pro­vides the set­ting for Ken Loach’s 1969 film, the clas­sic (and often very mov­ing) “York­shire film”, Kes.

The film, adapt­ed from Bar­ry Hines’s nov­el A Kestrel for a Knave, fol­lows Bil­ly Casper, a sen­si­tive and down­trod­den 15-year-old from work­ing-class Barns­ley who finds solace in train­ing a kestrel. It is a gen­tle dra­ma about harsh cir­cum­stances, and I remem­ber its impact: it was some­thing of a sen­sa­tion, and it won the young actor, David Bradley, a deserved BAFTA for his role.

Bil­ly’s broth­er bul­lies him and his fam­i­ly neglects him. At school, most of his teach­ers ridicule and reject him, espe­cial­ly sadis­tic Mr Sug­den (Bri­an Glover, with a bravu­ra per­for­mance you’ll see below). Bil­ly appears head­ed for a menial job with no future and con­se­quent­ly has no moti­va­tion and noth­ing to look for­ward to, until the day he finds a kestrel, a Euro­pean fal­con, which he befriends and cares for. He rais­es, nur­tures, and trains the fal­con, whom he calls “Kes”, and encour­age­ment from one of his more sym­pa­thet­ic teach­ers (played admirably by Col­in Welland) offers Bil­ly hope.

The nat­u­ral­ism achieved in the film is tes­ta­ment to Loach’s direc­to­r­i­al skills and his desire for authen­tic­i­ty. The schoolkids that he directs play their parts for real, with lit­tle appar­ent self-aware­ness. It often feels as if the view­er is watch­ing via a hid­den cam­era. Take this clas­sic foot­ball match scene, below, where­in Mr Sug­den boss­es the kids boor­ish­ly (though, it has to be said, high­ly amus­ing­ly), elic­it­ing much ban­ter, rich with local jar­gon and accent, from kids on and off cam­era. It will per­haps prompt rec­ol­lec­tion of cold, mud­dy sports pitch­es from your own school­days; it does me. How­ev­er, it is a charm­ing piece of social real­ism that you will enjoy even if you don’t catch every bit of dia­logue!

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