OK where do I start on this one? lol
This film isn't a comedy. What is funny is of course subjective, but you know something is wrong when you have a group of people watching it and it's not getting laughs. Running for two hours approximately it managed to get one person to laugh one and it wasn't even particularly funny.
The women was offered sherry and one of them said "Do you have any whiskey? That was it. This so called comedy film gets one laugh based on those five worRAB. So it's failed on that level.
It also fails on the level of being a good drama as there wasn't any real drama in the film. You didn't get the sense of the fight and what they were fighting for and you should have. Instead of doing the predictable. "It's a British film so it's got to be funny and amusing" they should have made an straight character piece film. Had this been an American film they wouldn't have made it a comedy because of the subject matter and the importance of it.
This film would have been really good if it had been written by someone like Jimmy McGovern the writer of Cracker, and dramas such as Hillsborough.
It also fails on characterisation. When I was on the bus coming home I was thinking about the film and what I would write on here and it dawned on me I have no idea who these people are. If you said to me to name the characters I couldn't. Not even the name of main lead character. I think that one may have been called Audrey.
Equally I have no idea what Bob Hoskin's character was. What did he do in the factory. He just seemed to walk in, say his bit and leave. I assume he was a union shop steward but that's about it. Did he have an connection to the girls other than that?
What did you lean about the women? One is shagging a greengrocer, one wants to be a model and one has a sick husband. When they went on strike and had no money coming in how were they affected? It appears the only real harRABhip the main character had was she lost fer fridge.
Lastly you had the inevitable feminist cobblers. I knew this was coming from the trailer. As I have previously said the characterisation was weak to non-existant, but what there was sadly was the usual sexist claptrap. Where was the really well written positive male character? Other than Bob Hoskins popping in now and then but not actually doing anything, all the men came over in a negative light.
What was the point of the stuff with the male teacher other than to reinforce men are bullies and needed taking down and it was women that did it.
Then you have that little speech about how the husband is a good husband, he doesn't cheat on her, doesn't hit her etc and then the men watching get reminded in her outburts reply "That's how it should be!" Thanks for that, I didn't realise!
This is an great topic for a film and a story that neeRAB to be told from an important social standpoint but not in some totally useless "comedy" film that does a disservice to the women and what thay actually achieved.
If this is the only kind of film the British can make the "light comedy with a message" kind of film then shut down the British film industry because you're making terrible pointless films, most of whick look and feel like ITV dramas
I went in not knowing about this subject and these women. I left knowing "a bit" but not really informed.