| The film movingly explores the bond between a college lecturer and a Goshawk |
THERE has been quite a bit of buzz locally about the film H is for Hawk which is currently screening at the Parkway cinema in Cleethorpes.
It explores how acquiring and training a hawk (which she names, Mabel - from the Latin, amabilis, meaning lovable) becomes the obsession of Helen Macdonald, a lecturer at Jesus College, Cambridge.
In some strange way, the bird seems to provide an anchor to her life following the sudden death from heart failure of her much-loved father, Alisdair, a photographer with the Daily Mirror.
The action is based on the true story recounted in a book of the same title by Helen who co-produced the film.
It has to be said that many parts of the book are heavy going.
The film, by contrast, is tightly-edited and crisp.
The movie is also more successful in exploring both the touchingly tender bond between daughter and her father (it survives just as strongly after his death) and her warm, but less affectionate, relationship with her mother and brother.
There is some fine acting in the supporting roles, notably by Lindsay Duncan, as the mother, but it is the performance of Claire Foy as Helen Macdonald which really excels - not least because, to fit the role, she had to learn to engage with a live Goshawk, a large and energetic prey with fierce bills and talon.
There is a rough honesty about how Helen is portrayed. Far from being a paragon of tenderness she has plenty of ragged edges - she is self-centred, chain-smokes, swears and plays rap music at top volume in her late father’s car where she seems careless at the wheel.
With, a somewhat slovenly approach to life and slightly cruel laugh, this character is not someone you would necessarily want as a reliable friend.
But it is impossible not to sympathise with and admire a woman trapped in grief and loneliness, yet simultaneously able to find an anchor in her life through her affection towards a bird that in no way can reciprocate.
Looking at the credits, the extent of female involvement in the making of the film is conspicuous, and, perhaps in a nod to diversity, even the GP who diagnoses Helen’s depression is changed from a man in the book to a black woman in the film.
Plaudits to the director, Philippa Lowthorpe, who ensures the narrative is taut and almost entirely free of sentimentality apart from one moment when the Goshawk seems to be casting a tender eye on its owner as she sleeps.
Also creditable is a lecture hall sequence, late in the film, which explores the ethics of hunting with raptors and whether, as in times gone by, there might today be a role for interaction between humankind and birds as an alternative to watching them with detachment from afar.
It should be noted that though the theme is underscored throughout by grief, the message is emphatically not one of despair.
The last word, spoken in a flashback sequence as Helen’s father asks her to pose for a picture is: "Smile".
And before the credits roll, we see on screen (and are invited to interpret) the words written in 1373 in Revelations of Divine Love by the ascetic, Julian of Norwich (1343-1416): "All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of things shall be well".
What happened to the Goshawk, for which Helen had paid £800?
It is not revealed in the film, but according to the book, the bird "flew for many more seasons before a sudden untreatable infection with aspergillosis - airborne fungus - carried her from her aviary to the dark woods where dwell the lost and dead."
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