Another film that the critics don’t agree with me on is a
gangster movie directed and written by Ray Burdis and based in Glasgow, (but
filmed in the East End of London because the Strathclyde police were not
chuffed by the way they were portrayed in the movie!) The Wee Man (2012) depicts the
‘true’ story of the Scottish gangland villain Paul Ferris who from the age of
nineteen became an enforcer for the notorious Glasgow born gangster Arthur ‘The
Godfather’ Thompson, collecting debts and allegedly administering ‘justice’ on
the big mans behalf. The movie looks at Ferris’s background, his family and
friends and how he came to become a criminal. It is claimed that his life of
crime started when following several years of bullying by a local criminal family,
and still a teenager, he carried out a series of revenge knife attacks on the
brothers and was arrested and sent to Longriggend Remand Centre. It was on his
release he came to the notice of the man that was to rule Glasgow’s criminal
underworld for over thirty years.
Paul Ferris with Martin Compston. |
The strength of this movie, which was based on the books
that Ferris wrote while he was incarcerated over the years, is in the acting.
Martin Compston, who has been appearing in the very well received BBC crime
drama The Line of Duty, brings Paul
Ferris to life, while John Hannah, who played Rebus in the TV series of the same name from 2000 to 2001 before
Ken Stot made the character his own in 2006, makes a convincing fist of Tam
‘The Licensee’ McGraw. Also in the cast are Patrick Bergin as Arthur Thompson,
Stephan McCole as Thompson Jnr Arthur’s son and Rita Tushingham as Arthur’s
loyal wife. Also it would be remiss not to mention Denis Lawson who brings a
real touch of class to the role of Paul Ferris’s dad. All right it not the Godfather (1972) or even Peter Mullan’s Glasgow crime story Neds (2010) but it was certainly
worth digging out of the bargain bins at Fopp’s.
Fab movie. Thoroughly enjoyed it. Stellar cast.
ReplyDelete