Native Son (2010 film)

For the novel Native Son (1940) or the films Native Son (1951) and/or (1986), see Native Son. For the American Sportscaster, Scott Graham, see Scott Graham.
Native Son

Sean Harris as "John" in Native Son
Directed by Scott Graham
Produced by Cinema Extreme
David Smith of Brocken Spectre
Film 4
Written by Scott Graham
Starring Sean Harris
Agnieszka Bresler
Kirsty Strain
Barrie Hunter
Tony Bradford
Kate Dickie
Leo Horsfield
Music by Sons and Daughters
Cinematography Yoliswa Gärtig
Edited by Rachel Tunnard
Release dates
  • May 15, 2010 (France)
Running time
19 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Budget $50,000

Native Son[1] is a 2010 drama film by Scottish director Scott Graham, based on an original screenplay. The film stars Sean Harris, Agnieszka Bresler, Kirsty Strain, Barrie Hunter and Leo Horsfield.

Plot

John, played by Sean Harris, lives in a remote area of Scotland. The primary industry is potato farming and John is a picker who lives for the harvests; it is his outlet and all he has in his life. He yearns for contact, but is so self conscious that he comes across as awkward and skittish.[2] His other outlet is watching people who live a life that he does not know how to make for himself – a life of home and family. John does not know how to act when a female co-worker shows interest in him. John exhibits all the signs of someone who has suffered untold tragedies in his life.[3]

While driving back to town on a dark and isolated road, John comes upon a car stopped up ahead. He immediately can see a hose attached to the exhaust pipe. He has come upon a suicide by carbon monoxide; he tries to help but the woman is already dead. Suddenly, headlights appear in the opposite direction and John’s immediate reaction is to hide the body, though he has done nothing wrong. John is like one who feels blame for every event, even those for which there is no blame. That decision leads John to take the body of the dead young woman to a shed in the woods. Now John finds the intimacy and physical contact he so desperately craves.

Early the next morning John is awakened to hear the sounds of police combing the woods calling his name. He has overslept. He quickly throws on some clothes and begins to run through the woods, but townspeople have now taken up the search for John. He runs, at first, but he suddenly gives up trying to escape his pursuers and turns to face them, looking skyward. The townspeople have found him first. He knows his fate, and the townspeople club him before the police arrive.

In his final moments, the policewoman who first comes upon John touches his head to examine his wounds and strokes his wounded forehead as he dies from the clubbing. It may have been the only gentle touch that John has known.

Cast

Production

Filming

The filming of Native Son was completed in 5 days and was filmed in Annan, Scotland.[4] The film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival during the week of July 5, 2010.[1][5] and screened at the 2010 Palm Springs ShortFest.[6]

Sensitively filmed, despite the topic of breaking a taboo. Excellent writing, direction, and an exceptionally sensitive performance by Sean Harris, John can be viewed as the victim of his own untold back-story circumstance and a resulting desperation that leads him to commit the final prohibited act.[3]

Screenplay

Director and screenwriter, Scott Graham, said that the subject of necrophilia was not written for the shock of a real paraphilia.[4] It is about loneliness.[3] Scott Graham came up with the idea for the screen play when he had to move from Scotland to Amsterdam, the Netherlands for an extended period while filming another film.[3] His own feelings of isolation and his feelings of disconnection, while away from home, provided the inspiration for the screenplay.[3]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Native Son (2010)". Mubi. Retrieved January 19, 2014.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Scottish Screen. "Scottish Screen". Creative Scotland. Retrieved January 19, 2014.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Hunter, Allan. "Tales of Native Son". Northings. Retrieved January 19, 2014.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Jamieson, Terry (May 6, 2010). "Director Scott’s got a Cannes do attitude pays off". The Scotland Herald. Retrieved January 19, 2014.
  5. British Film Council. "British Film Council Our Projects 2012, Scott Graham Short Film Promotion Scheme Awardee". British Film Council. Retrieved January 19, 2014.
  6. Palm Springs International Film Society. "Palm Springs International Film Society". Retrieved January 19, 2014.

External links