I had only been to the movies recently; Neil and I had gone to Madfabulous. But shortly later, another film would hit the theatres: Effi o Blaenau. I saw the trailer and was immediately interested. A film about a girl living in dead-end Blaenau. Sounded up my street! Not so much Neil’s, so I thought I would go alone.
The film was really well received by the critics, and got a lot of media attention, and that piqued Neil’s interest. So we went together after all. He had never been to a Welsh film, even with subtitles.
I was a bit taken aback by the title. Grammatically correct it would be “Effi o Flaenau”, but maybe the marketing department wanted to keep the town name intact for those who don’t speak Welsh and don't understand mutations.
We went to Pontio this time, as they had the most convenient screening time. It wasn’t sold out, but quite busy! And they made us sit through half an hour of commercials and trailers. Then it finally began.
Effi is a young girl who seems to not work or study but lives in a house with a friend. She has a grandma who cares, but she doesn’t appreciate that. She is rude to the lady living opposite. There is a bloke called Kev she has some sort of involvement with. And she gets wasted every weekend. That sort of seems to be her life.
Spoiler alert
One night she goes to a nightclub to get wasted and meets a handsome stranger, and has a one night stand with him. This time she is really smitten, and really hopes it will lead to something more. But he doesn't answer her texts. And, of course, soon she realises she is pregnant. She goes on a quest to make him acknowledge her, but she finds out he has a wife and a child and gives up. And feeling quite alone, she reaches out again to her grandmother. Who accepts her back in her life. Kev thinks the baby is his, and welcomes it. He is not well pleased when she tells him it's not his.
With her grandmother on her side she decides to have the baby. And Kev gets over the fact that he's not the father, and is supportive as well. But disaster strikes again. At 28 weeks, she goes into labour. She phones 999, but they tell her it will take quite a while for an ambulance to get there. She just takes a taxi. And she is taken in, but the place is terribly understaffed. They also make a point of portraying the hospital as in a terrible state, with exposed wiring everywhere, and abandoned repair work, and whatnot. The hospital initially tells her that all is well, but when the evidence becomes undeniable that that's not true, they decide she has to go to a hospital that has a neonatal space available. There are two options: Birmingham and Aberystwyth. They send her in an ambulance to Aberystwyth, even though it is snowing, and the roads are a bit iffy.
Needless to say that on the icy road, the ambulance crashes, and the paramedics have to deliver the baby there and then. It's too young to survive in an ambulance, and dies.
Kev figures there might be an opportunity to sue the hospital and claim compensation. A local lawyer thinks their chances are good. Effi has a problem with financially benefiting from the death of her baby. Later, at a hospital check-up, she meets the midwife she thinks should have been there with her in the ambulance and saved her baby, and confronts her. The midwife tells her that the problem in the first place was not enough neonatal spaces, and that having to pay off a bereaved mother would only lead to fewer spaces and more deaths. Effi decides not to sue. But she is not at peace.
At some point, the lady living opposite where she initially lived finds her passed out on the street, and in spite of everything, helps her out. To be honest, everyone who didn’t see coming that there would be some redemption here had their eyes closed. The next thing is that the grandmother does some babysitting for that lady. And encourages Effi to engage with the kid. Of course they soon have rapport, and go swimming together. And it ends with Effi stating that life in Blaenau is hard, but that the people there are resilient.
We both really enjoyed it! The acting was fab. I really enjoyed the scenery as well. They make a lot of the very empty landscape a bit east of Blaenau. I was trying to work out where the two houses are Effi lives in over the course of the film. I thought there was a bit of a thickly laid on moral, with the not suing the hospital story, but that is not a major thing. Aspects of the story were a bit predictable. Obviously, she would make amends with the lady across the street somewhere along the way. Also not a major gripe. We recognised the actor she has a one night stand with from Madfabulous. Wikipedia told me that even the lead actress had been in there, but I hadn't noticed that. Maybe the pool of Welsh actors isn't huge! And we wondered what Effi lives off.
I supposed the film paints a bleak picture of Blaenau. They make sure to give it bleak weather at all times, and they emphasise boarded-up houses and fly tipping. Effi’s main calorie intake comes from vodka. The lady opposite can barely feed her kids, and doesn't dare go to the swimming pool because people treat her badly there. And I suppose all of that is real. But they do plant positives. The forgiving grandmother, who takes her in even though she has a badly paid job at the chippy, and a small house, and is willing to see past the abuse Effi has given her before. The kindness of the lady opposite the street. The friends who are there for each other. The young lad who seems to live a life quite like that of Effi, but who manages to buy her a pram for the child that isn't his. I suppose all of that is real as well.
I think the film is quite a hit in Wales, and it might even be quite successful in England. The day after I happened listened to radio 6, and found Cerys Matthews interviewing the lead actress. It might even make it to the continent. Blaenau might become famous! In its Blaenau way…















