The Firm
Road
Although often overlooked in favor of his contemporaries such as Mike Leigh and Ken Loach, Alan Clarke was one of the major filmmakers to emerge in Thatcher-era England. In The Firm, Gary Oldman portrays a football hooligan attempting to organize rival gangs—known as "firms"—in advance of the upcoming European championships. Clarke's final film before his untimely death in 1990 critiques both the government which failed to address the concerns of violence at football matches and the hooligan community whom the director disdained for destroying the integrity of his beloved sport.
Alan Clarke is credited with launching the careers of British talent such as Gary Oldman and Tim Roth (who would both later imitate his style in their respective directorial debuts) but he went largely unnoticed beyond England, as most of his films were produced for the BBC. Road was adapted from Jim Cartwright's acclaimed stage play for British television, with glorious results. In a Northern industrial town, young people wander the streets in search of entertainment. Clarke uses Steadicam shots to capture the extended conversations between characters who reside in a community who blighted by economic hardship but still find simple joys in living.