Dave Johns Hayley Squires Sharon Percy
An older man, widower Daniel Blake (Dave
Johns), has survived a major heart attack and is told by his doctor that he
should not return to his carpentry job yet. This means he needs financial assistance, but bumps up
against an unforgiving bureaucracy.
He is told that to receive benefits, he must be looking for a job when
he is not supposed to be working; moreover, he must answer the same questions
over and over and fill out the application online, despite the fact that he
doesn’t have the foggiest notion about how to do anything on a computer. While waiting to be seen at social
services, he takes pity on a young woman with two children, getting the first
person in line to let her go ahead. This gets them both in trouble, and they are told to
leave. Thus develops the unlikely
friendship between two people who try to support one another through the frustrating
coming weeks.
Katie (Squires) is new in Newcastle, having
been forced to leave her previous apartment and supportive network in
London. She is having trouble
getting a job to provide for her family, and must visit the food bank for
supplies. Since Daniel has
handyman skills, he tries to make her apartment more livable, and she fixes meals
for him, sometimes foregoing eating herself. Additional dramas for the two include her arrest and Daniel
getting mixed up in a neighbor’s questionable business. But mostly, this is an indictment
against the British system of social services for its inefficiency and lack of
understanding for the people who need the services.
Most of actor Johns' previous work has been in
television, but he seems perfectly suited for this role as a practical, simple
man who is honest and charitable toward others. Squires is a perfect counterpart, bringing freshness and a
kind of earnestness to the action.
This is a quiet film—as Ken Loach’s films tend to be—quiet, but forceful
in advocating for the little guy and those victimized by larger forces in
society.
An eloquent plea for rationality and
common sense in a system clearly not designed for those in need of its
services.
Grade: B By Donna R. Copeland
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