捕鼠者1999

剧情片英国1999

主演:汤米·弗拉纳根,Mandy Matthews,William Eadie,Michelle Stewart,Lynne Ramsay Jr.,Leanne Mullen,John Miller,Jackie Quinn,James Ramsay,Anne McLean,Craig Bonar,Andrew McKenna,Mick Maharg,James Montgomery,Thomas McTaggart

导演:琳恩·拉姆塞

播放地址

 剧照

捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.1捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.2捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.3捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.4捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.5捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.6捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.13捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.14捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.15捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.16捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.17捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.18捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.19捕鼠者1999 剧照 NO.20
更新时间:2023-10-04 17:20

详细剧情

  故事发生在1973年的格拉斯哥,对于男孩詹姆斯(威廉·艾迪 William Eadie 饰)来说,这个夏天并不好过,炎炎的烈日让人怎么都打不起精神,而清洁工人的大罢工让街道瞬间变成了堆满了腐臭垃圾的垃圾场。当然,这些都不是最重要的,最让詹姆斯寝食难安的是自己的朋友赖安(Thomas McTaggart 饰)的死亡,是他的死和自己有着千丝万缕的联系。  透过詹姆斯的眼睛,我们看到了肮脏不堪的世界,但同时,他茫然踌躇的目光里依然饱含着对未来的憧憬和对爱的渴望。在谁也不知道的地方,一颗幼小的灵魂不断的被痛苦纠缠着,磨砺着,作为代价,它将绽放出最最让人惊诧的纯净光芒。

 长篇影评

 1 ) 捕鼠者 从一个孩子的死 透视冷漠和孤独

   这部电影讲述的是一个小孩自杀的故事 看后很震惊 也很无奈 在我的脑中十一二岁的儿童 天真浪漫 可能连生死的概念都没有 怎么会自己杀死自己呢 是不是导演过于艺术了 某个电影理论家 曾说过 电影其实就是减去琐碎片段的生活 我很赞同 也就是说电影就是我们生活的折射 有什么样的生活 就会拍出什么样的电影 那么这种看似极端题材的电影 是不是 意味着我们的生活确实出了毛病呢

  还是回到片中分析那个孩子的死因 这部片子是英国七十年代拍的 如果给生活在那个时代的中国成年知识人看 一定觉得怪诞 无法理解 是呀那个时候中国顶多刚够温饱 生活单纯 什么东西还凭票供应 一个月能吃顿红烧肉都过年了 如果不是被人为的批斗 自然灾害饿死 谁会自杀 更何况一个乳臭未干的小屁孩 但是放在今天 看过影片的知识人还会有多少人说不可理解呢 因为像这样儿童自杀事件作为新闻报道经常出现在我们的周围 是呀社会变了 于是我们的生活也被改变了

 2 ) 《捕鼠者》

人可能就是有被虐倾向的,贯穿全片如此心如刀割的感受,最后给人却是一种彻底的快感。

垃圾、老鼠、头虱、尸体、黑色的泥巴、死寂的河水……

虽然有红色的气球、收割完后金色的麦田、扯破洞丝袜的手、兄妹的依偎一些暖意,但最后我还是被那些冰冷的镜头、冰冷的人物所折服。

负罪、混沌的外界……,青春无法承受之轻……

琳恩·拉姆齐 Lynne Ramsay的前三部短片获得两次嘎纳最佳短片奖,这是她的第一部长片。一部爱者自爱,嫌者自嫌的电影。

2007-12-21

 3 ) 期许金色稻田的时代

以写实的手法刻画: 孤独、压抑、敏感的少年内心世界, 成长的自我。 更何况还有恐惧和内疚, 只好将好像永远消耗不完的精力发泄在荒诞与暴力。 他们既是捕鼠者,也是被捕的鼠。 有着自己的生活,自己的个性,自己的境遇的父辈们, 他们也有他们的程度,也有他们的难处, 成长的家庭。 肮脏的社区,混乱的街道,昏庸的政治, 成长的环境。 … 但是, 少年的内心深处其实是温暖和柔软的, 他们渴望被尊重和了解, 不只是吃饱喝足,更需要精神与心灵的关怀,与爱。 父辈们虽可以理解,但也可以做的更多。 … 那窗明几净,那蓝天白云,那金色稻田, 和那少年的笑容, 是最美好的期许!

 4 ) Drown in the Welfare

A history context analysis on the British Realism Film Ratcatcher

Ratcatcher is the first feature-length film by British female director Lynn Ramsay. Since being released in 1999, it has won lots of awards at various film festivals, because of not only the delicacy of its shooting but also its profound reflection on British society in the 1970s.

Fig 1 The death of James' friend 0:06:33

This contemporary film’s realistic focus on the working class inherits the spirit of social realism in the British New Wave in the 1950s and 1960s. At that time, on the one hand, the British economy was devastated by the war, the middle class was weakened and the working class appealed to a fair and stable social environment (Winson, 2013, p. 22). On the other hand, the success of the Soviet Union has raised people’s doubts about the capitalist system. Hence, the image of the “angry young men” began to appear in literature and film, usually showing the discontent of the working class with class society (Luo, 2019, p. 24). The films of this period are known as British New Wave and social realism, or working-class realism from the content, poetic realism from style.

Furthermore, the Labor party, which represented the interest of the working class, began to dominate in parliament, and strongly promoted nationalization and welfare policies. However, after some degree of economic recovery, the defects of the welfare system unveiled gradually and led to stagflation (Winson, 2013, pp. 5-6). Until 1975, Margaret Thatcher of the Conservative party came to power and advocated neoliberalism, cutting welfare spending, and encouraging market competition (Scott-Samuel et al, 2014, p. 54). The British economy was boosted but also brought a widening of the class division and the decline in the living quality of the working class. Therefore, in the 1980s, British social realism was revived and lots of films focusing on the working class appeared again (Shafer, 2001, p. 9). The story of Ratcatcher happens in 1973 and reflects the life of the working class at the end of the welfare society, many of the details in the film are closely related to the social background at that time.


l Laborers and Rats

Rats is perhaps a metaphor for laborers. The welfare system provides enough living security and seriously discourages the laborers’ enthusiasm for work. The traditional virtue of labor is replaced by the lazy pleasure of consumerism (Zhang & Lin, 2018, p. 40). In the film, James’ father is a representative of the working class, sleeps all day instead of working, indulges in TV, beer, and football. His only wish is for the committee to allocate a new house.

Fig 2 James' father is watching TV 0:19:24

Moreover, any attempt to reduce welfare will cause public discontent, like this cleaning workers’ strike. The garbage in the streets and the television news reports all hint at this situation.

Fig 3 The report on the strike 0:12:47

Under this circumstance, tax revenue falls but welfare spending stays high. The government is in a passive position and the national economy is in a downturn. The working class does not create social value but lives in the burrow of the welfare system like the rat. The strike in the film leads to a chaotic community where rats live with people, implying they are homogenous, dirty, poor, and living at the bottom. The ratcatcher is referring to the coming Thatcher reforms, to the abolition of the welfare state and the elimination of the welfare-dependent working class. At the end of the film, the army, representing the government, is deployed to clean up rats and rubbish, while residents shout abuse upstairs.

Fig 4 The army is cleaning up the rats 1:20:02


l Males and Soccer

As a female director, Ramsay pays deep attention to gender identity. The identity of the male is lost at that time. When livelihoods depend on welfare, the role of men as the source of income is weakened. By contrast, when the center of life moves from society, the public sphere, to family, the private sphere, consumerism overwhelms the culture of the working-class, the status of the female is promoted (Zhang & Lin, 2018, p. 40). Therefore, for the male, on the one hand, they feel a sense of marginalization in this loss of identity, so they try to acquire a sense of self-satisfaction through a kind of arbitrary, which includes contempt for the female and arrogance towards their juniors, such as James’ father slaps his wife when drunk or the teenagers humiliate Margaret and tease James and Kenny.

Fig 5 The teenagers are teasing James 0:31:44

On the other hand, soccer, as a sport that relies on unity and physical strength, becomes the last symbol of working-class culture, and the spiritual sustenance of the male. In the film, boys play soccer in the street, James’ father persistently gives James a pair of soccer shoes as a gift, and even the teenagers throw Kenny’s mouse back and forth like soccer.

Fig 6 The teenagers are teasing mouse 0:50:00


l Children and Water

In the Ratcatcher, children may be more like “angry young men”. The story is narrated from the perspective of James, a child. Compared with the frustration of adults, children’s psychological activities are more complicated. Vitality is a child’s nature, which is suppressed by a negative social atmosphere. The desire of young men to break through the social hierarchy by working hard is limited by a lazy welfare system, like carrying the death of a friend.

Fig 7 James suicides in the canal 1:27:55

Water is perhaps a metaphor for the welfare system. Water can either support life or deprive it. The bathtub full of water brings James happiness, but the endless sewage in the canal drowns his friend like an overdose of welfare, which is gently but fatal, so neither James nor his friend struggles in the canal.

Fig 8 James and Margaret play in the bath 0:59:57

Therefore, children are the only ones having hopes for the future, because the future is an escape from reality, which is the origin of the poetic element. The suburban house for James and the moon for Kenny, are all the places with poetic background music, and without water.

Fig 9 No water in suburb house 0:40:51

Furthermore, under this repression, children are eager to grow up and have a voice, so they imitate the elders. James tried to join the teenagers and control his sisters. Whereas, when the suburban house is locked and Margaret is still humiliated by the teenagers, James realizes his helplessness and gives up and suicides in the canal. But for Kenny, after being rescued from the canal, he joins the camp of ratcatcher.

Fig 10 Kenny is catching rats 1:24:25

Ratcatcher is a calm and slow film. What Ramsay expresses is not simple criticism of Thatcherism or sympathy on the working-class, but the two-sidedness of policies and their great impact on the public. After two decades of Thatcher's policies, it is worth wondering what Britain is and about to face.

Word Count: 1080

(excluding 84 words on remarks of figures)


l Reference List (APA)

Calderwood, A. (Producer). Ramsay, L. (Screenwriter/ Director). (1999). Ratcatcher [Motion Picture]. Britain: British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).

Luo, X. (2019). 论英国新浪潮电影的“厨房水槽”现实主义美学特征 [the Realistic Aesthetic Characteristics of "Kitchen Sink" in British New Wave Films]. Journal of Guizhou University (Art Edition), 33(2), 22-26. doi: 10.15958/j.cnki.gdxbysb.2019.02.004

Scott-Samuel, A., Bambra, C., Collins, C., Hunter, D. J., McCartney, G., & Smith, K. (2014). The impact of Thatcherism on health and well-being in Britain. International Journal of Health Services, 44(1), 53-71. Retrieved from JSTOR Journals. Retrieved from //www.jstor.org/stable/45140692

Shafer, S. C. (2001). An overview of the working class in British feature film from the 1960s to the 1980s: from class consciousness to marginalization. International Labor and Working-Class History. (59), 3-14. Retrieved from JSTOR Journals. Retrieved from //www.jstor.org/stable/27672706

Winson, A. (2013). Social realism of British New Wava “Left” films: The working-class border character. (Master’s Thesis) Available from ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Database.

Zhang, J., & Lin X. (2018). 20世纪八九十年代英国工人阶级电影特征 [The characteristics of working class in British working class films in the 1980s and 1990s]. Movie Literature, (10), 39-41. doi: 10.3969/j.issn.0495-5692.2018.10.013

 5 ) In the eyes of the child: Hope and Redemption in Despair

This blog post will engage with the main themes in the popular reception of the film Ratcatcher (Ramsay, 1999), using as a sample 25 user reviews and comments from the Chinese review-aggregation website Douban, selected on the basis of their length and complexity.

One of the most frequently encountered opinions, 10 of the reviews that I examined interpreted the film from the perspective of teenagers. They think this film depicts the inner world of a depressed, lonely, and sensitive teenager in a realistic way, and reflects the poverty and unbearable life of working-class life in Britain through the vision of a child. In particular, users write of ‘the growing pains of a teenager at the bottom of the pile’. Most people are saddened by the desperate emotional rendering of the film – a story of a traumatized teenager's confusion and sadness in the face of society and the world. For viewers of Douban, the film has reaped the most accolades for its portrayal of British society. Similarly frequent are views about the director’s shooting technique and cinematography, with users often remarking on Ramsay’s solid work as a photographer, revelling in the close-ups and contrasts between the movements and stillness of the shots in the film’s scene.

The film does reflect the oppression and suffering of the British working class through the eyes of the child, James, and many social contradictions are further revealed through James’s interactions with his family and friends. Although Chinese audiences are immersed in an atmosphere of despair and sadness, in my viewpoint, there is still a sense of redemption and hope in some scenes.

In the Ratcatcher, the story is set in the 1970s during a general strike by rubbish workers in the Glasgow area, where the streets were littered with rubbish, houses were in disrepair and rivers were muddy. Like many films typified by the British Kitchen sink Drama, Ratcatcher exposes the grim characteristics of society. It focuses on the lives of poor communities and the impact of poverty on families, and shows the depression and powerlessness of working-class life (Williams,1977; Higson, 1984). But Ramsey largely rejects institutional context and history, abandoning traditional political drives in favour of a more symbolic, suggestive, obscure narrative (Carlota, 2016). Thus, the Ratcatcher can be seen as a film of poetic realism and viewers can feel its hints of hope and redemption in scenes of despair.

Figure 1: The city streets are full of rubbish

Kenny's Snowball seems to be an amalgamation of destruction and hope. James has to endure the violence of those older than him but also wants to protect this cute little mouse. In the next series of shots, which are James's fantasy, the mouse flies to the moon in a red balloon and joins other mouse companions. This fantasy is also James's longing, which also represents the innocence and hope of children. As Aitken (2011) points out, Ramsey's use of fantasy techniques belies some of the tones of realism and makes surprises to create a form of poetic realism. Because at this point, James hopes to find his true playmate, who will no longer have to endure violence and pain. Just like rats fleeing from the earth, he wants to escape this awful community. Thus, poetically, the Ratcatcher gives the audience a child's perspective of how the underclass grows from the rubbish and how James releases his guilt and pain in his fantasies. James' fantasies seem to escape the mire of life and this moment of innocent simplicity contrasts with the dreary tone of the film, which makes the audience realise that these underclass teenagers still harbour hope, only to slowly fade away in the struggle of reality.

Figure 2: James’ fantasy of Snowball flying to the moon

If the fantasy of a snowball flying to the moon represents the innocence and hope of a child, James in the wheat field has a sense of redemption in the film's desperate and heavy tone. The golden fields of wheat are a stark contrast to the dirty canals and rubbish-strewn city streets, where James can run freely through them without suffering violence or pain. In this poetic scene, James steps through the window and jumps into the wheat field. And at the same time, the cheerful and melodious music brings the audience to the romantic world of the child. Here he fantasizes about having a new house built in a field, which is also James' hope. The Ratcatcher seems to set up a 'paradise' in which the hope of society is rediscovered in the children’s vision.

Figure 3: James in the wheat field

Sadly, at the end of the film, James is unable to cope with the growing pains in a society of inequality and despair, and he chooses to die. However, the scenes immediately following add some imaginative warmth as he and his family arrive in the wheat field carrying belongings with the smile on their face, where their new home has been built. But they are still framed beyond the window, which seems to suggest their isolation from real life. After this scene, there is still a grey scene in which James sinks into the dirty river. This is a combination of landscape and narrative; thus, the dialectic of illusion and disillusionment is carried out, from the good mess into the bad mess (Trotter, 2008). Moreover, this tragic ending seems to hint at the disillusionment of James’s hope, but some pauses in the scenes, such as the pauses in the shot as James sinks and the pause in the running through the wheat field, still give the audience a powerful sense of redemption.

Figure 4: James’s fantasy of moving to a new house

Figure 5: James sinks into the canal

In sum, Ratcatcher is a poetic realist film that places individual confusion and social trauma in the scenes of despair and sadness through the eyes of children. However, the film leaves room for hope and redemption for the children, preserving them between fantasies and camera pauses.

Words: 1013

Reference list:

Aitken, S. C. (2007). Poetic child realism: Scottish film and the construction of childhood. Scottish Geographical Journal, 123 (1), 68-86.

Higson, A. (1984). Space, Place, Spectacle. Screen25 (4/5), 2-21.

Larrea, C. (2016). Ratcatcher. Senses of Cinema, 80, 1–5.

Ramsay, L. (Screenwriter/ Director). (1999). Ratcatcher[Motion picture]. France: Pathé Pictures International

Trotter, D. (2008). Lynne Ramsay’s “Ratcatcher”: Towards a Theory of Haptic Narrative. Paragraph, 31(2), 138–158.

Williams, R. (1977). A Lecture on Realism. Screen18 (1), pp.61-74

 6 ) 捕鼠者

这是一个容易在回忆里退色的夏日午后,东中街明晃的太阳下,脑中阴凉的潮水泛起。想起这部电影。
 
70年代的夏天,苏格兰的格拉斯哥。垃圾工人罢工,垃圾袋侵入了门前的领地与人们的生活。大人们忙碌生计,或许做着搬进新房的美梦。孩童在恶臭的池塘边混乱垃圾堆上玩耍。混混叼着香烟,嘴角弯起嘲弄的笑,近视的女孩乖从地褪去衣服。傻子幻想他的雪球白鼠能飞上月球,在那里愉快地繁衍生息。James 是一个掌扣在此般氛围中生长的孩子。对这一切有着似懂非懂的眼神和忧郁的天真。有对玩伴意外死亡的阴影。有与同一屋檐下父母姐妹的疏离。对傻孩子的友善。对安妮温暖的向往。偷拿了父亲口袋里的钱,搭上莫名其妙的公车,去探寻自己的小小出口——彼岸某地,窗外一望无际的麦田。远离肮脏污秽的城镇,远离病态阴郁的现实。
 
影片有一个既幸福又哀伤的结局,James最后像片头那个淹死的玩伴一样沉入冰凉的水里,泡泡浮起,渐弱。那里有他的梦境——家人在那片金黄的麦田朝新房走去,妹妹手里拿着顶面嵌镜的盒子,镜面反照出天空——那个天堂的世界里,他定会有美好的日子。
 
伤心不可以轻易说出,眨眨眼,继续我的赖活。
 
字幕:纯正的苏格兰发音有时候让我怀疑自己是否学过英语。多亏了字幕。在论坛上发现,这调调有些英格兰人听起来也犯晕。
 
音乐:小白鼠飞飞的曲子系Hans Zimmer的'You're So Cool'改版,Carl Orff的"Music for Children." 假想和现实的甜蜜酸涩的反差。有空要找来听。妈妈跳舞的曲子里,受伤的老爹回家,欢乐中的惊心。贴着剧情的配乐。很不错。

 7 ) 小记

本以为James的父亲George成为救人英雄后一家人可以顺利地搬进新家,可救人之后偏偏迎来了检查人员,家中的凌乱及浑身的污泥使搬家的梦想泡汤。

试想George或者说一家人实际上赚到了什么呢,我第一时间想到的只有受颁的奖状与奖章,以及那件免费清洗的西服外套。这很难不让人联想起理想与现实的差距,有时你以为突如其来的“好事”能为理想助燃,不料却将火苗一把掐死。

《捕鼠者》在结尾前始终维持着某种动态平衡关系——于James而言,父亲的责骂、不良少年的欺压都可以与同受欺负的Margarita相互慰藉;幻想住进麦田后的新房也能些许抹平肮脏混乱的居住环境于身心的荼毒。但这就像是一个左右摇摆的天平,本质上是不稳定、不可持续的,因为天平两侧不同的质量终会导致有一侧先落地,以结束这一病态的平衡关系。当James发觉无法拯救“心爱”的Margaret,心底的秘密又被Kenny戳穿,自己也无法进入麦田后的房子时,混乱于James上叠加到了峰值,天平崩塌沉入水底。

 短评

说不出来的棒

4分钟前
  • ButtMan
  • 力荐

last film in SFF. Tilda is so charming!she said she will attend Lynne's next film which is really expecting! really love this director anyway.(有一些細節和特質是可供辨認的。如同你的小說。)

5分钟前
  • 我不像小船
  • 力荐

鬼魅的诗意与严酷的现实在拉姆塞的[捕鼠者]里产生了奇妙的化学反应。前者在她极善于捕捉细节的镜头里迸发,而后者则毫无征兆地再度降临,犹如突然打向绞在窗帘里小男生的一巴掌。死水的形象在电影里有着举足轻重的地位,凝滞肮脏好像死亡的宫殿;但同时又蕴含着巨大的流动潜能,这就是直觉里诗的样子。

10分钟前
  • brennteiskalt
  • 力荐

理解伦敦骚乱的社会原因

13分钟前
  • 饿霸地煮
  • 推荐

镜头暗下去的时候我心一直揪着,喊着快起来啊。。。还好结尾看到了麦田中他的笑脸,一切美好的像什么也没发生过一样。大人们总是不能理解孩子,怎么忽然就发脾气了,怎么忽然就哭了,其实他们只是不肯试着去了解。绝对的五星。对于这种闷片,开始看的时候真是很痛苦,看完之后,也真的很爽。

17分钟前
  • 托尔
  • 力荐

这种英式青春片的灰色暗调调是从哪里开始发源的呢,包括自我苑囿自我厌弃自我怜悯的小形式主义小象征主义都很相似,这片又多了几个梦幻的场景镜头,算是感人之处。最后结尾处杂草场的用光好亮,一家人都来这个梦幻地了,小男孩的笑也是幻想,都沉在水底了

20分钟前
  • 阿廖沙
  • 推荐

不错

22分钟前
  • 何生生
  • 推荐

我或许也应该在这20几年的某段时间里让自己能有理由的离开这个世界

26分钟前
  • 4-ever
  • 推荐

如此残酷孤独灰暗的童年,真让人心脏受不了~

28分钟前
  • 黑樱桃摩卡
  • 还行

这简直是我看过的最好的英国青春片了。那特写,太销魂了。音乐的口味也棒。开放式结尾

33分钟前
  • 猫猫
  • 力荐

孤独,阴冷,寂寞,隔阂,贫穷,无处诉说,不被理解,忧伤,死亡,性。童年。此类英国电影永远是我的软肋。

35分钟前
  • 從淵
  • 力荐

梦想中金灿灿的生活,和恶臭腐坏的现实之间的距离,可能比死与生之间的距离大得多。被结尾沉沉击中。电影中阴雨不绝的格拉斯哥,垃圾遍地、老鼠四窜的居住环境,让偶尔的几个想象镜头显得尤其宝贵,并且那几个镜头也透着一点点导演女性视角的温柔吧

38分钟前
  • 米粒
  • 推荐

很好看~

39分钟前
  • 布·迪安
  • 力荐

原来真的有很多老鼠…闷片不推荐

42分钟前
  • 影志
  • 较差

垃圾堆积如山形成的破败环境,老鼠和跳蚤,不良少年与糟糕的生存环境。用这些外部环境展示主角内心,同时再以美好的梦境(麦田)作为对比。看这片总有点提心吊胆的,总觉得下一秒会发生什么恐怖的事情。

43分钟前
  • 桃桃林林
  • 推荐

孤独是什么,是一觉醒来只有漆黑又寂静的房间陪着你。走出去,脏乱街上也没有人,只有那一阵一阵的凉风。但是,不要怕,走下去,总会找到喧闹而又亮堂的街市。

45分钟前
  • 我lu不会飞
  • 推荐

在泥沼中打滚,如野草般疯长。日常片段与意象强化,让此种颓丧而无望的气氛渗入人心。与安德里亚阿诺德如同天平的两端,一个似暖阳,一个如寒月。

46分钟前
  • 嘟嘟熊之父
  • 推荐

越往后越强...

48分钟前
  • 大宸
  • 推荐

无助与失落在成长中交相辉映。Goodbye, Snowball!

49分钟前
  • jj73浅之
  • 力荐

清冷萧索

53分钟前
  • 胡子
  • 力荐

返回首页返回顶部

Copyright © 2023 All Rights Reserved