Ken Loach's THE NAVIGATORS follows a group of South Yorkshire railway workers during the mid-1990s privatisation of British Rail. The film features Loach's typically asute social commentary and subtle humour. Read more
| Starring | Steve Huison, Joe Duttine, Tom Craig |
|---|---|
| Director | Ken Loach |
| Genres | Drama |
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Ken Loach's THE NAVIGATORS follows a group of South Yorkshire railway workers during the mid-1990s privatisation of British Rail. The film features Loach's typically asute social commentary and subtle humour.
| Starring | Steve Huison, Joe Duttine, Tom Craig |
|---|---|
| Director | Ken Loach |
| Studio | BFI VIDEO |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 32 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Released | DVD: 22 Apr 2002 Production year: 2001 |
| Format | DVD |
New Labour may be in the ascendancy, but little has changed for the average worker according to Ken Loach in this stinging swipe at post-socialist Britain. Joe Duttine and Tom Craig demonstrate suitable Yorkshire grit as the rail gangers whose livelihoods and self-esteem are jeopardised by privatisation. But, in spite of its wordily worthy asides, this is hardly Loach's most impassioned or persuasive picture. The humanity that gave his earlier socio-dramas an integrity to match their commitment has been replaced by a more strident politicking. Yet, this survey of exploited employees, divided communities and profit-driven management still rings all too true.
Topical drama, full of righteous anger at the dismantling of Britain's rail service to the detriment of efficiency and safety, but the script is sometimes too polemical for its own good.
This is a marvellous movie!
It really shines a light on how the selfish legacy of the Eighties scarred the people of Britain.
The characters started out as generally kindhearted and humourous and end up probably negligently killing a friend through fear of losing their jobs... what have we become backstabbing, selfish and manipulative all inspired by Thatcherism.
I remembered this a a TV drama rather than a Loach classic. When I say classic, it's not as beatiful as "Kes", it's not as heart wrenchingly desolate as "Raining Stones" but it is enjoyable. You have the classic mix of fine actors mixing it with non-actors (the guy in the chippy is looks genuinely scared when quetioned by tight John as to the whereabouts of his "free" sardines). It also highlights the ludicrous nature of railway privatisation and the effect it had on the working man. You could have swapped the site manager and the headteacher in "Kes" and not noticed the difference.