
Note: The flywheels at the MPAA still follow their unvarying policy of awarding the PG-13 to vulgarity and empty-headed violence (" 2 Fast 2 Furious"), while punishing with the R any film like this, which might actually have a useful message for younger viewers. The first crime in his criminal career was the one committed against him by his society.

At the end of "Sweet Sixteen," we see no hope in the story, but there is hope in the film itself, because to look at the conditions of Liam's life is to ask why, in a rich country, his choices must be so limited. Michelle Coulter, who plays his mother, is a drug rehab counselor who also has never acted before, and Annmarie Fulton, who plays the sister Chantelle, has studied acting but never appeared in a film.īy using these inexperienced actors (as he often does in his films), Loach gets a spontaneous freshness scenes feel new because the actors have never done anything like them, and there are no barriers of style and technique between us and the characters. He has never acted before, but is effortlessly natural. Compston, who plays Liam, is a local 17-year-old discovered in auditions at his school. The movie's performances have a simplicity and accuracy that is always convincing. And the mother can't make the break with the man she has learned to be submissive to. But the boyfriend can't permit that it would underline his own powerlessness. He dreams of establishing a home where he can live with his mother, his sister and his sister's child. Yes, he could break out somehow-but we can see that so much more easily than he can. He never quite understands how completely he is a captive of a system that has no role for him. "Sweet Sixteen" has a similar character Liam is sweet, means well, does the best he can given the values he has been raised with. Bring a classic game with a twist to your Sweet 16 party Your favorite party game, Pin the Tail on the Donkey, is now perfect for your Sweet 16 and you can get it on our website for FREE. Some will recall Loach's great film " Kes" (1969), about a poor English boy who finds joy in training a pet kestrel-a season of self-realization, before a lifetime as a miner down in the pits. Eventually he comes to the attention of a local crimelord, who offers him employment-but with conditions, he finds out too late, that are merciless. Liam and his best friend, Pinball ( William Ruane), have up until now raised money by selling stolen cigarettes, but now he moves up a step, stealing a drug stash from the grandfather and the boyfriend and selling it himself. He finds a house trailer on sale for 6,000 pounds, and begins raising money to buy it. He runs away, finds refuge with his 17-year-old sister Chantelle ( Annmarie Fulton), and begins to dream of supporting his mother when she is released from prison. The boy is beaten by the two older men, as punishment, and his precious telescope is smashed. He refuses: "You took the rap once for that bastard." But the mother is the emotional and physical captive of her boyfriend, and goes along with his rules and brutality.

We see the three men during a visit to his mother in prison, where Liam is to smuggle drugs to her with a kiss. The movie's hero is a 15-year-old named Liam ( Martin Compston) who has already been enlisted into crime by his grandfather and his mother's boyfriend. In "Sweet Sixteen," there are no jobs, thus no wages. His "Bread and Roses" (2000) starred the future Oscar winner Adrien Brody as a union activist in Los Angeles, working to organize a group of non-union office cleaners and service employees. The director of "Sweet Sixteen," Ken Loach, is political to the soles of his shoes, and his films are often about the difficulties of finding dignity as a working person. Determined to have a normal family life once his mother gets out of prison, a Scottish teenager from a tough background sets out to raise the money for a home. True, and the only lesson I can learn from that is that in both countries too many young people correctly understand that society has essentially written them off. Carlas song and AE fond kiss, but Sweet Sixteen. "I don't usually (Christine) say things like this to (sixteen) girls your age, but when I saw you coming out of the school that day, that day (Christine) I knew, I knew (sixteen), I've got to have you, I've got to have you.Yes, you say, but this movie is set in Scotland, not America. Sounds like a chick flick (nothing wrong if you like that genre its just that Im not into that kind of movies in general).

She drives me crazy, I want to give her all I've gotĪnd she's hot every day and night, there is no doubt about it She's got me in her hands, and there's no use in pretending She's got me dizzy, she sees me through to the end
