“Choose life,” Mark Renton suggested back in 1996, when he was a heroin addict in Edinburgh. Mark’s advice was ironic, of course: He was courting death.
But he was also rebelling against a life of conformity and consumerism.Trainspotting hardly romanticizes drug addiction – the film’s depictions of the ravages of smack are mostly disgusting (sometimes hilariously so) and often horrifying – but there was a certain defiance, a certain choosing of living on one’s own terms, in Mark’s refusal to sleepwalk into doing the expected. That came to the fore in the film’s ending, when he walked away from his friends with the gym bag full of money they’d all just scammed their way into. Nasty, perhaps. Uncool to his friends, definitely. But what a choice.
Turns out, being a heroin addict-slash-thief was going to be the high point of Mark’s life. You thought the 1990s were awful? Welcome to the 2010s. Whatever sparse, cold satisfaction might have been wrung from Trainspotting’s punk insolence is gone from T2, to be replaced with an exhausted, bitter cynicism, one that barely has any tolerance for melancholy and even less room for sympathy.
It’s today in T2, and Mark (Ewan McGregor), fleeing a failed marriage, returns from an extended sojourn in Amsterdam to discover that Simon (Jonny Lee Miller) – aka Sick Boy – is the landlord of a rundown pub; that Begbie (Robert Carlyle) is in prison; and that Spud (Ewen Bremner) is still a junkie. None of them are very happy to see Mark, and indeed Mark’s motive in showing up seems to be more one of a pendulum swinging inevitably back to its starting point than out of any genuine desire to see his old friends.
What happens from there includes more felonies, a bit of drug use (though not much: Mark is mostly addicted to exercise these days), and some male bonding (or re-bonding, in this case). It’s inevitably less shocking than Trainspotting was, partly because its characters are older, a tad wiser, and too worn out by living on the edge to do that anymore.
But also we’re no longer surprised by Danny Boyle’s genius; Trainspotting was only his second feature, and we know what to expect from him now. Of course, Boyle is a master, and T2 is visually stirring and exciting. One particularly heart-wrenching image lets a shadow on a wall emphasize the hole that the death of Mark’s mother has left on his little family and on his childhood home.
Visual impact aside, the most intriguing aspects of T2 are thematic, in the passage of time – not only for these characters but for the world. The film was shot last summer, after the Brexit vote and after Donald Trump had secured the Republican presidential nomination, and it can’t help but score zingers on the same forces of cultural retreat and retrenchment that have driven these connected realities. (T2 is very British, but it will resonate with Americans, too.)
Mark arrives back in Edinburgh to find a very different city from 1996, all Starbucks and pretty young Eastern European women handing out brochures while wearing tiny tartan skirts. He’s amused by this‚ and later he gets involved in a scam with Simon to get some EU development money that’s supposed to be used for a rather shady improvement to his pub.
There’s a Euro cheeriness to T2, and a definite smack at those who cling to ancient, local identities, like the members of a social club who cannot let go of a military victory that happened in 1690. Mark and Simon are able to rip those guys off easily, because they are so predictable in their single-mindedness.
Mark’s got a new “choose life” speech here, and it’s all about the brutality of social media and the crushing state of the horrible economy. But there’s nothing nostalgic, no yearning for the past, and when it seems as if Mark is about to descend into sentimentality over his return home, Simon warns him to snap out of it: “You’re a tourist in your own youth.”
There may a lot of rage against the global reality of Brexit and Trump, but there’s no suggestion of going backward, only forward and through.
T2 TRAINSPOTTING (3) • Directed by Danny Boyle • Starring Ewan McGregor, Ewen Bremner, Jonny Lee Miller • Rated R • 117 min. • At Osio Theater
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