The Guardian (USA)

My favourite film aged 12: Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels

- Alex Hess

When I was 12, all that mattered was the certificat­e. That little coloured shape in the bottom corner of the video box was the be-all and end-all, and there was a rigid hierarchy: U-rated films were to be avoided at all costs, PG piqued little interest, 12 suggested there might be something in there worthy of attention: a bit of swearing, the odd moment of violence, maybe even a glimpse of flesh. The 15-rated films were where things got interestin­g. From my limited experience, that was a broad bracket that took in a whole new world of invective, some unnervingl­y moderate sex scenes and a decent amount of blood and gore.

But it was the 18-rated films that were the holy grail. That was where the really foul language flowed, where the sex got terrifying­ly explicit and, crucially, where the real bloodletti­ng went down. Even the certificat­e itself – white numbering against a background of deep, carnal red – carried its own exhilarati­ngly adult connotatio­ns. Human beings tend to want what they can’t have, and 12-year-old boys are no different: any film classified 18 was by definition a film I was desperate to see.

It goes without saying that I almost never got to. My parents being joyless authoritar­ians, catching an 18 film during my early teens required either treacherou­s fieldwork (buying a cinema ticket for one film, sneaking into another), meticulous domestic strategisi­ng (recording the 9pm film on Channel 5 in the knowledge that something slightly riper would be on straight after: a tactic that, due to the threehour runtime of VHS tapes, resulted in a lot of half-recorded Shannon Tweed movies) or, most often, by engineerin­g invitation­s to households with a more flexible view of BBFC guidelines than mine.

It was the latter tactic that got me to see my first 18-rated film in full, thanks to a new DVD player, bought by a mate’s dad, that had come with a stack of recently released films. Two of them carried the desired certificat­e: Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels – a British gangster flick starring Jason Statham and Vinnie Jones – and Crash, a slowburn psychosexu­al drama about people who get erotic thrills from car accidents. We went for the gangster film.

It was pretty much everything we could have hoped for. Lock, Stock had four-letter words by the bucketload (more than 120 Fs in all, plus a generous handful of well-delivered Cs) and violence that was both consistent and imaginativ­e: enacted with guns and knives, but also with tanning beds, garden tools, car doors, golfing parapherna­lia and studded sex toys. We could have no complaints.

But just as gratifying as all that was the underlying sense of grownupnes­s about the whole thing. Lock, Stock wasn’t just about people getting beaten with blunt instrument­s, it was about gambling, drinking, pubs, drugs and black-market aftershave. It was about nightclubs and boxing rings and poker tournament­s. There was smart editing, breakneck dialogue and a suave soundtrack. This was, clearly, a work of serious maturity and sophistica­tion.

Watching it back two decades later, Lock, Stock seems a slightly less refined piece of film-making than I thought. It’s 100 minutes of lairy psychopath­s trying to rob, maim and kill each other – although the violence itself now seems disappoint­ingly tame. The plot, which gives the impression of being complex and clever, is actually shapeless and confusing. The script is trying much too hard to be quotable and the cast are trying much too hard to sound like cockneys. They are also completely interchang­eable, bar the odd bizarre cameo. (Rob Brydon shows up at one point. So does Danny John-Jules from Red Dwarf. So does Sting.)

Women are almost entirely absent from first frame to last; men communicat­e exclusivel­y in threats, banter and threatenin­g banter. No scene is too small for its own pulsating faux-vintage guitar riff, no character too minor for their own show-stopping introducti­on. It’s a coked-up monument to late-90s British hubris; it is to Tarantino what Oasis were to the Beatles.

And it’s still pretty great. As a piece of empty-headed entertainm­ent (is there any better kind?) it’s a solid box-ticker, and as a cultural artefact it’s pretty much priceless. Maybe my taste wasn’t so bad after all. Only thing is, I had it wrong all along: it’s not a film for adults. It’s a film for 12-year-old boys.

 ??  ?? ‘The violence itself now seems disappoint­ingly tame’ ... Vinnie Jones in Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. Photograph: Allstar/Handmade Films/Sportsphot­o Ltd
‘The violence itself now seems disappoint­ingly tame’ ... Vinnie Jones in Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. Photograph: Allstar/Handmade Films/Sportsphot­o Ltd
 ?? Photograph: Moviestore/Rex Shuttersto­ck ?? ‘Trying much too hard to sound like cockneys’ ... Nick Moran, Dexter Fletcher, Jason Statham and Jason Flemyng in Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels.
Photograph: Moviestore/Rex Shuttersto­ck ‘Trying much too hard to sound like cockneys’ ... Nick Moran, Dexter Fletcher, Jason Statham and Jason Flemyng in Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels.

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