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Sunday 15 September 2024, 3:30 pm
Rainbow Cinema Northumberland Mall

Old Oak PosterLocal pub The Old Oak had long been the meeting place in a small North Country former mining town. But with the sudden arrival of a group of Syrian refugees, the habits and certainties of the locals are shaken up. Two communities in pain, one suffering from the trauma of war and exile, the other, from social deprivation, gradually come to terms with one another as the story unfolds. Poignant, restrained, sharply observed, The Old Oak — Loach’s self-avowed swan song — caps a legendary career of some 40 films, most of which are devoted to those who’ve been left behind by the capitalist system. A powerful lesson in courage and openness.

Directed by: Ken Loach
Screenplay by: Paul Laverty
Starring: Ebla Mari, Dave Turner
Cinematography: Robbie Ryan
Language: English
Running time: 113 minutes
Rating: 14A

Review by John Corrado

The latest and possibly final film from British director Ken Loach, The Old Oak is another poignant social realist drama exploring themes of unrest in modern England, this time centred around the migrant crisis.

Done in his usual neorealist style, the film focuses on the clash between a group of Syrian immigrants who are dropped off by bus in the middle of a forgotten mining town in North East England, and the working class denizens of the rundown local pub at the centre of town that gives the film its title.

TJ Ballantyne (Dave Turner) is the owner of The Old Oak, which serves as the watering hole for the local union men and women, who gather there in the afternoons to have a pint and air their grievances about the newcomers in town.

old oakThe film opens with a series of still photographs showing the locals protesting the arrival of these immigrants, as their skirmish plays out on the soundtrack. The photographs are being taken by Yara (Ebla Mari), a young woman who has come from war-torn Syria with her mother and siblings, and is documenting the less-than-kind greeting that her family receives getting off the bus.

TJ helps Yara, who is unsure if her father is still alive back home, and does his best to support her through the conflict. But when he starts to open up the pub to the refugee families, the divide deepens with the locals who remind him that they are the ones keeping him in business. Loach acknowledges the inherent knottiness of their resentment; yes, their reactions to the newcomers often bleed into bigotry and xenophobia, but it’s rooted in the feeling that they themselves have been left behind, with their properties devalued and dim financial prospects.

In one scene, TJ helps his friend Laura (Claire Rodgerson) deliver aid packages to the Syrian families, including dropping off a used bike for one girl. He encounters a group of local boys who question why they don’t get delivered bikes. “They came here with nothing,” TJ reminds them, but he also wonders why they aren’t doing more to help their own. When Yara sees photos from TJ’s union days, when the whole town would come together to share meals and fight for the miners, she recognizes some similarities in their struggles.

The messages and themes can feel a bit broad (the tilting letter “K” above the pub that falls again when TJ tries to fix it serves as an obvious metaphor of the town’s decline), and the film lacks some subtlety in its dialogue and somewhat predictable outcome. But The Old Oak works as a sincere feel-good tale about people from different backgrounds coming together, with the screenplay by frequent Loach collaborator Paul Laverty built around the bond that forms between TJ and Yara.

Loach has a deft hand at crafting these heartfelt character moments, finding drama and connection in the plight of the common man (and woman). If The Old Oak lacks some of the sheer power of Loach’s 2016 Palme d’Or winner I, Daniel Blake, it’s a fitting and touching swan song for a filmmaker who has devoted the latter stages of his career to documenting the struggles of the working class.

Trailer