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Local Hero 40 years on - with a book to celebrate


I'm sitting in a little cottage looking over Loch Morar about 4 miles from Camusdurach beach (here for a week). We walked along the beach strand near low tide yesterday, just like Mac & Danny discussing the stuff made from oil, though we were discussing how the film would differ in today's world: the take on fossil fuel exploration would be rather different. 🤔
Anyway it reminded me that it's 40 years since the film's release so I was looking for anything relevant online. Delighted to discover this very recent book Local Hero: Making a Scottish Classic by Jonathan Melville.
As for the past 39 and a half years I've considered Local Hero the best film I have ever seen and knowing every scene intimately (and about the best score too) I must have this book as soon as possible, maybe tomorrow if there's still a bookshop in Mallaig. I'll pick up a few grains of sand off the beach to see if I can barter 😉.
Slàinte Mhath

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40 years already? Yikes.

I saw this movie when it came out too.
It was one of those small movies that I liked a lot.
I wondered who would still have something to say about this movie, and it's cool that you are at the same place they made the movie. The world has indeed changed ... almost totally.

While I would not say that for me Local Hero rates quite so highly, one of my favorite movies of all time has Peter Reigert in it, as an unemployed jacket salesman, Chilly Scenes Of Winter. Absolutely brilliant movie. One thing I remember from Local Hero was the Mark Knopfler song at the end, which I went out and bought as a single I liked it so much.

The books sounds interesting. I hope you come back and comment on it.

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So here's my review of the book Local Hero: Making a Scottish Classic by Jonathan Melville (placed on the website from which I purchased):
I was on Camusdarach beach last week, staring at my hand, full of the fine powder sand, wondering if it really was 10,000 (give or take) grains and how many would make a hatful. Which of course reminded me that it must be about (almost exactly) 40 years since the release of Local Hero, to my mind the best film & music score ever. So a little research to see if this staggering anniversary was marked in any way (it is!) resulted in my discovery of this brilliant & lovely book by Jonathan Melville.
The book superbly runs chronologically through the film with so many side stories, interviews and quirky detail (I never knew the lemon juice slapstick was a late addition and it was good to have confirmation that no rabbits were harmed, and probably none eaten either, during the making of the film). I've long lost count of the number of times I have watched the film and enjoyed the sheer delight of the genius of Bill Forsyth's wry humour and absolutely spot on sense, as he has said, that "it's what happens in between the story that's important". Wandering down the side lanes as Sandra Voe puts it. So true and this book takes that fully on board in its style. And Peter Riegart: "That Bill is something else!". It's also clear that the cast and crew generally had a whale (or was that a sea lion) of a time in its filming. The insights into the ceilidh are truly wonderful. I had no idea Mark Knopfler was so involved during the filming. But I can't imagine, in 1983, Catriona's single word would have ever made it to the final cut. Shame really, especially if it was actually filmed, which I rather doubt.
[continued in next post as I have run out of space]

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[ continued]
Thank you, Mr Melville, for producing this gem. Out of the almost 8 billion people on the planet, I guess it's probably only a few tens of millions that know and love this film (maybe a stetson full if each were a grain of sand - it could even be a bigger number). As I have done, every one of them should buy and thoroughly enjoy this book. Sláinte!

There's a lot going on next week (25-28 May 2023) in Aberdeenshire to celebrate the 40th anniversary: https://www.cinescapes.co.uk/ Sadly, I can't be there.

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Didn't see it until a few years after its original release, but it's been in my Top 5 ever since!

Hard to believe its been 40 years, even if the world is a very different place.

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Great post!

Absolutely love Local Hero as well. It's just one of those films that stays with you - the last scene with Mac back in his soulless apartment is heartbreaking. I always hope he's ringing to say he's going back...

Anyway have you / will you be visiting Pennan as well?

Have you ever visited Staithes? Probably the closest place I've visited to the combination of beach and village in real life...

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This is Scotland! Cool cloudless skies yesterday. Deep blue sea & aquamarine shallows, with cloudless Coulin & Rhum. They elect a new SNP leader. Today it's more than smirr or dreich, it's rather oorlich (had to look it up). I doubt there's a connection. So a little trip into Mallaig shortly & maybe a stroll later along Loch Morar north shore to Bracorina if it clears a little.
Visited Pennan for the first time two years ago. Lovely village & I see why it was chosen for its character. But for me it'll always be Camusdarach. Geography and geology are not well served by the choice of locations! It's so obvious that Pennan isn't on the west coast. But then west coast Morar is an unlikely location for North Sea oil infrastructure. Whatever, it really doesn't matter. Whole lotta scenery though 😉 For me, it's the beach that's the crucial element of why the film works (apart from the characters, dialogue, humour, music, incidental side delights (so many, impossible to say which is best)) and crucial to the whole thing could be the beach-related fact that a hatful of sand wouldn't be business-like. Never understand how people (and apparently even Bill Forsyth) say nothing really happens. A myriad of stories as well as the main one.
Rain stopped but Mallaig visit produced no book 🙁. It'll have to wait till Fort William or home.
Yes been to Staithes, another lovely place with a great history. A whole lot of the British Isles really take some beating (non-political comment 🙄).

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Great stuff - enjoy the rest of your trip.

Not sure about Fort William for book stores but if you're also visiting Inverness, they had a cracking book shop (in what I think was an old church), with some massive open fire right in the middle of it last time I was there. Definitely worth a visit.

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Thanks. That'll be Leakeys. Not going to Inverness this time. We were there last July after Hebcelt for the Runrig musical The Stamping Ground which was great. No it's back home to Devon at the weekend. Next year we aim to have a week in Arisaig and also visit Coll & Tiree where we've never been, some good beaches there too apparently. Well into our 70s now so need to get these things done!

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And just in case anyone's interested, here are a few images from the past 3 days of some of the best scenery round here, no bombing of the beaches, no injured rabbits also.
https://photos.app.goo.gl/DdL4VnXeiuem5Kkt8

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