1st watched 9/2/2002 - 7 out of 10(Dir-Ken Loach): Well played and disturbing documentary style movie about one messed-up family's life but more specifically the life of one of the children. Janice was supposedly perfect growing up, but went bad according to her parents when she started speaking her own mind and making her own decisions. The parents lost control of her and throughout this movie they seemed to be trying to fight for it back. The camera follows this family through the qwest of trying to find out what's wrong with Janice and why she's having so many problems. The sad thing is that no-one really figures this out despite many different treatments that are done on her. This movie is played out like a documentary case study, but it's actually a film played out by actors but it is done so well that it's hard for anyone to tell. Movies like this are more than entertainment, they are sobering melo-drama's about the hard things of life and how we do and don't cope with them.
Family Life
1971
Action / Drama
Family Life
1971
Action / Drama
Plot summary
A 19-year-old London girl receives aggressive psychiatric treatments for her schizophrenic behaviour from a doctor who still wants her family to insure the guard of the child without any regards to the fact that it is this family who's aggravating her situation.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
Movie Reviews
Well played and disturbing documentary style movie...
Painfully accurate!
I first saw this film a few years back in a graduate school film class and it continues to haunt me with its power. During the initial screening, I actually had to leave the class for some air and collect myself: it struck a nerve that I hadn't felt sense my teenage years: the frustration of being a troubled teenager who was sorely misunderstood. . Most parents like to think of themselves as good parents if they work and put food on the table (which is hard enough in itself.) But that is not enough! Nurturing comes to play as much as being a provider and this is something the parents just don't get. And what's sadder is that they are in a highly polarized environment (1971) between young and old, both sides too quick to assign blame.
As a teenager growing up in the 90s, I experienced some of the same frustrations as the girl in this story and was all too often categorized as a "problem" simply because the adults in my life were "doing the best they could" and therefore there has to be something wrong with me. I was luckier than the girl of this story, who's best hope for salvation is vanquished by a psychiatric bureaucracy that is too concerned about appearances to have the patience to be progressive in their ways and their thinking.
"Family Life" is a rarity. A film that does not get old but can serve as a lesson and a warning to future generations.
Didn't hold my interest
A documentary-style production from Ken Loach which looks at the trauma suffered by a young girl who is forced into abortion by her own parents. Very low-key and slow, as befitting the documentary approach. A look at the power politics inside a single family while also shining a light on the social milieu of the early 1970s. Unfortunately although the subject matter is certainly hard-hitting, I didn't like this anywhere near as much as I liked earlier Loach films like POOR COW and KES.