I’ll
never fully work through the list of good movies I haven’t seen, and I’m sure
there are others on that list more pressing than this one, but who cares? I’d heard good things – both about the movie
and the musical it inspired – and I recently discovered that the excellent
Robert Carlyle (Once Upon a Time’s
Rumpelstiltskin) is in it, so I watched it and had a grand old time.
The Full Monty is of course the
story of a group of men, unemployed steelworkers from Yorkshire (until I
learned about Robert Carlyle’s involvement, I’d somehow missed that it was
British – weird,) who decide to earn some fast cash by becoming strippers. Now, this is not a Magic Mike thing. All these guys are regular Joes, not what you’d
call knockouts – they come in various ages, weights, and levels of
pastiness. So naturally, there’s plenty
of comedy to be mined from their reluctantly awkward attempts to learn their
new trade.
And
comedy there doubtless is – Simon Beaufoy’s script is filled with funny gems. There’s ringleader Gaz’s disastrous first
strip rehearsal (note to self: if you’re
going to seductively twirl your jacket above your head, make sure the pockets are
empty,) everyone’s horrified reactions to their last-to-be-removed costume
item, and some perfectly-timed, pithy music cues. And that’s just a few choice stripping-related
humorous bits. The laughs come steadily
and delightfully throughout the whole film, and our hapless heroes get into all
sorts of other amusing situations, too; my favorites include an epic bungled
burglary and an utterly ridiculous job interview.
But the
film has a surprising amount of heart as well.
Gaz spearheads the whole scheme because he’s determined to scrape enough
money together to maintain joint custody of his son, and his ongoing struggle
to connect with young Nathan is one of the movie’s important through lines. Another is the way losing their jobs seems to
cut these men off at the knees – many of them begin the film drifting, unemployment
sapping them of pride and hope. This is
especially evident in Gerald, the former foreman who, six months out, still
hasn’t admitted it to his wife. In a
bizarre way, stripping helps them take back a bit of agency from an indifferent
world.
A final
significant theme deals with the nature of objectification, of men finding
themselves uncomfortably within the scope of the female gaze. There’s a lot of self-consciousness from all
the guys (even as they continue to objectify women as a matter of course,) but
pudgy Dave carries the brunt of it. As
he and the others suddenly begin to be concerned about the state of their
bodies, he agonizes over his belly and quietly wonders if women will be kinder
about him than he’d be about them.
Robert
Carlyle’s Gaz is the clear center of the film, and he magnificently inhabits
the role. Tom Wilkinson(!) is great as
Gerald, and the movie also features Lesley Sharp (Skye from “Midnight” on
series 4 of Who.) I’m not familiar with any of the other
actors, but they’re all great, with special mention going to Mark Addy as Dave
and William Snape as Nathan.
Warnings
Language,
drinking, smoking, miscellaneous delinquent activity, and sexual content, including
stripping (obviously!), speedos, and nudity (though, incidentally, not the
actual full monty itself.)
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