We started our current season last September but in the light of the Coronavirus Pandemic we decided to can what remains of our programme. I write notes for every film we screen and some people even read them. For the sake of completeness I'll post them all over the next few weeks as I currently have no plans to go anywhere.
I'd not seen this film at the cinema, but it was quite fun: certainly a good way to bring an audience back to our film club after the summer break.
I'd not seen this film at the cinema, but it was quite fun: certainly a good way to bring an audience back to our film club after the summer break.
Fisherman’s Friends
UK 2019 112 minutes
Director: Chris Foggin
Starring: James Purefoy, Daniel Mays, Noel
Clarke and Tuppence Middleton
“Fisherman's Friends is a formulaic but thoroughly amiable and upbeat British
comedy with a flavour of Ealing Studios and The Full Monty about it. The
plot which the screenwriters have cooked up seems almost an afterthought. The
singing fishermen came first. The
Fisherman’s Friends really were signed by a major record label, had a top
10 hit, and turned into a full-blown media sensation. The film takes
considerable liberties with their story, but fans of extra mature Cornish
cheddar won’t be complaining.”
Geoffrey McNab
While visiting a
Cornish village on a stag weekend Danny (Daniel Mays) a London music executive
is tricked buy his boss (Noel Clarke) into trying to sign a group of local
fishermen who sign sea shanties. As he struggles to gain the respect and
enthusiasm of the group he is drawn deeper into their traditional way of life
and this makes him re-evaluate his own integrity and what success actually
means.
The film declares that
it is “based on a true story”, but the reality is that Meg Leonard and Nick
Moorcroft, the writers and producers of the film, saw the group Fisherman’s Friends performing on TV, optioned
their life rights and then created their own story. The real life story of the
group is more mundane: radio presenter Johnnie Walker bought two of the group’s
homemade CDs while on holiday in Cornwall and then his manager travelled to
Port Isaac to meet them and then negotiated a recording contract worth £1
million for them. A very different view of the contemporary Cornish fishing
industry can be seen in Mark Jenkin’s Bait
(2019), which Peter Bradshaw described as “an episode of EastEnders directed by
F W Murnau” and which Mark Kermode has hailed as one of the defining British
films of the decade.
Nick Moorcroft has
written a number of successful British comedy films including St Trinian’s (2007) and St Trinian’s: The Legend of Fritton’s Gold (2009,)
and more recently the romantic comedy Finding
Your Feet (2017). Chris Foggin has worked on a films as diverse as My Week with Marilyn (2011), The Iron Lady (2011) and Effie Grey (2014) as an Assistant
Director as well as performing a similar role in a number of high profile
television programmes, but this is his first feature film as director.
Here's a link to the trailer:
Here's a link to the trailer: