It’s more than 40 years since Ken Loach shot Kes in South Yorkshire, taking in school and home life in an area where nature meets the mining industry on the skyline.
After making television films and Poor Cow (1967), Loach made Kes (1969), the story of Billy Casper (David Bradley), a smart but wayward schoolboy who lives near Barnsley with his mother and older brother and who, despite a quick mind and tongue, has a reputation as a rogue. Kes marked a new maturity and stillness in Loach’s work, which doesn’t mean it’s without energy or humour – it has both in spades.
Loach found fitting partners in cinematographer Chris Menges – who translated Loach’s eye and ear for documentary-style realism into a quiet form of observation, using natural light – and writer Barry Hines, whose novel A Kestrel for Knave the script was adapted from and whose compassion and knack for everyday dialogue runs through the film.
The ideas in Kes on the role of both teachers and parents emerge naturally and gently from vital, believable portrayals. It’s a bird, of course, that gives the film its name and the scenes with Billy and his falcon are undoubtedly special and tender. But in the end, Kes is one of the most astute, engaged films about education and what it takes for kids to be excited about learning or passionate about anything, really, whether in the classroom or roaming the fields with a feathered friend.
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