Houston Chronicle

Britain’s cold bureaucrac­y is the focus of satisfying ‘I, Daniel Blake.’

- By Mick LaSalle mlasalle@sfchronicl­e.com

“I, Daniel Blake” is about a 59-year-old British constructi­on worker who gets out of the hospital after having a heart attack. His situation is pretty straightfo­rward. He needs government assistance until his doctors can certify that he’s healthy enough to return to work.

What follows is a Kafkaesque journey into government-agency hell.

It’s directed by Ken Loach and can be looked at in one of two of ways. This is either the story of what happens when a government stops caring about its people — or it’s a story about how things go to hell once government gets involved at all. In any case, it’s about a system that seems designed to make people feel that they’re entirely worthless and should just die and decrease the surplus population.

Loach is that kind of a filmmaker, a downbeat guy with a social conscience whose films deal with the hardships of working-class life. But there’s something about this movie, which won the Palme d’Or prize at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival, that is very easy to take. It’s serious, but it’s not a downer, or at least it doesn’t feel that one. The lift comes from the casting of a comedian, Dave Johns, in the title role.

Johns doesn’t make “I, Daniel Blake” into a laugh-a-minute or even a laugh-an-hour exercise. But he keeps things from getting unbearable with his lightness of being. He just doesn’t seem cut out for tragedy. This is a temporary situation, as he sees it. Obviously, someone will soon realize that he really can’t go back to work and that he needs a little help. It’s just a little hiccup that he has to call heartless bureaucrat­s and then wait on hold listening to Muzak for upwards of two hours. But soon everything will be sorted out.

This is the paradox of the movie: At least half the scenes are about frustratin­g and even maddening situations, not only maddening to poor Daniel, but maddening to anyone who watches, as in the audience. But the actual experience of “Daniel Blake” is not one of frustratio­n. In fact, the film brings a kind of satisfacti­on, a sense of “Oh, good. Somebody is finally showing how horrible this is.”

Johns is terrific, the heart and soul of the movie, playing the kind of guy that’s the heart and soul of any industrial­ized country on the planet. So this is the guy they want to throw on the garbage heap? This is the guy who is expendable?

It’s enough to make you want to scream, except you don’t have to scream.

Ken Loach does the screaming for you.

 ?? Entertainm­ent One Films ?? From left, Dave Johns, Hayley Squires, Dylan McKiernan and Briana Shann are featured in “I, Daniel Blake.”
Entertainm­ent One Films From left, Dave Johns, Hayley Squires, Dylan McKiernan and Briana Shann are featured in “I, Daniel Blake.”

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