Movie Analysis:
"The
Butcher Boy"
Review by Katharine
E. Monahan Huntley
In a Dramatica grand
argument story, it is the obstacle character that has the
most impact on the main character. The obstacle character, wittingly
or unwittingly, will compel the main character to remain steadfast
to their particular paradigm or change to the obstacle character's
point of view.
Typically, the obstacle
character is one person or single entity. In the case of Neil Jordan's
The Butcher Boy, and Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange
(story example available in the Dramatica 3.0 software), the obstacle
character is the society in which the main character functions.
The Butcher Boy,
an adaptation of Pat McCabe's novel, is a brutal account of one boy's
moral destruction set against the "duck and cover" environment
of fear that emanated from communism, specifically the 1962 Cuban Missile
Crisis. Precocious and full of Gaelic charm, "The Incredible Francis
Brady" (main character) is an ebullient twelve-year-old
with a wide Irish eyes smile and an unfortunate set of parents-a beautiful
and suicidal mother, and a father who " . . . was the best drinker
in the town." Francie sets up the story with a voice-over narration:
"When I was a young lad . . . I lived in a small town where they
were all after me on account of what I'd done [to] Mrs. Nugent."
What follows is
a cinematic treatise on the making of a psychopath.
Francis steals apples
from Mrs. Nugent's tree and extorts Green Lantern comics from
her bespectacled son, Philip. Mrs. Nugent tells his mother exactly what
she thinks of the Bradys: "Pigs!" igniting a feud (story
driver-action) between the boy and neighbor that erupts in unholy
carnage. During the course of the story, Francie's pranks evolve from
the malicious to the unconscionably vicious. He is sent to a reform
school where he easily manipulates his release, a mental institution
where he escapes, and even fools his parish priest who exhorts the townspeople
to " . . . pray for the redemption of Francis Brady . . ."
Each personal tragedy, most notably the death of his mother and perceived
betrayal of best friend Joe Purcell, exacerbates the sins he commits
against Mrs. Nugent and the small community. Finally, the town's authorities
" . . . put Francie Brady in the 'garage' for bad bastards."
(oc resolve-change)
Like anti-hero Alex
in A Clockwork Orange, none of Francie's actions are excusable,
but there is a margin for understanding. In one of the film's most poignant
moments, Francie lists his losses on the steamed up kitchen window with
his finger-unaware his abandoned soul is the most tragic loss of all.
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