The Debt Collector

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The Debt Collector

DVD Cover of 'The Debt Collector'
Directed by Anthony Nielsen
Produced by Graham Broadbent (producer)
Damian Jones
Liz Bunton(line producer)
Written by Anthony Neilsen
Starring Billy Connolly
Ken Stott
Francesca Annis
Music by Adrian Johnston
Cinematography Dick Pope
Editing by John Wilson
Release date(s) June 25, 1999
Running time 109 min.
Country UK
Language English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The Debt Collector is a 1999 thriller, directed by Anthony Neilsen and starring Billy Connolly, Ken Stott and Francesca Annis.

Loosely based on the character of Jimmy Boyle, The Debt Collector explores themes of forgiveness, revenge, change and the macho culture of modern urban Scottish life.

[edit] Plot Summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The film opens in late 1970s Edinburgh, Nicky Dryden (Billy Connolly) is arrested by Gary Keltie (Ken Stott) for his part in enforcing the collection of moneys owed to a loan shark.

Soon the film moves into the present time, Dryden has left prison and changed his ways. he's now a feted sculptor married to journalist Val Dryden (Francesca Annis) displaying his first show. The show is interrupted by Keltie who is disgusted by Dryden's new found respectability and claims that he hasn't paid his debt to society. Dryden wishes to move on from his past crimes, but Keltie is determined not to let him forget his past.

At the same time a young wannabe gangster Flipper (Iain Robertson) is obsessed by Dryden's dark past and wishes to emulate him. He takes part in low level crime, which escalates in a murder of a janitor at a swimming pool (played by Ford Kiernan).

Keltie continues to harass Dryden and his family, including disrupting a family wedding. When Dryden's stepson is murdered, Dryden seeks revenge. He contacts one of his old underworld colleagues who arranges for Flipper to attack Keltie. Flipper however violently attacks Keltie's mother (played by Annette Crosbie). This leads to Keltie breaking into Dryden's home to attack Keltie, but Dryden is at the Edinburgh Tattoo at the time, and instead takes his vengeance on Dryden by raping his wife.

Before the tattoo Flipper makes contact with Dryden and boasts about his crime to Dryden. Disgusted by the attack on an old woman, Dryden himself brutally attacks Flipper, killing him in the end. Keltie eventually meets up with Dryden, and in a fight outside Edinburgh Castle ends up being killed by Dryden.

The film ends with Dryden being acquitted of the murder of Keltie, but he is a broken man, disabled by the attack, his marriage has broken up and he is once again estranged by polite society. Finally Keltie's mother is placed in a nursing home to reflect on the loss she has endured.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Miscellanea

  • Although predominantly set in Edinburgh, much of the film was filmed in Glasgow as part of the condition of the Glasgow Film Fund.
  • It won the FIPRESCI prize at the Troia Film Festival