A Nostalgic Scottish Christmas: “Comfort and Joy”

Bill Forsyth’s Comfort and Joy has the quiet dignity of an old Christmas jumper, albeit one with a distinctly odd pattern.

By Robert Cairns

Roger Ebert famously called cinema a great empathy machine, but movies are also nostalgia machines, especially when we feel like things are going wrong in the world. Look how well everyone dressed back then, we might say while watching North By Northwest; look how safe it was to walk the streets at night, we might observe with envy while watching Brief Encounter. This awakens in us a reactionary tendency which can be very illuminating, provided we reject that label as a cudgel and reclaim it as a tool to try and measure the distance between then and now.

The temptation to play games of compare and contrast is often heightened around Christmas. We compare our lives not only to the lives of others but also to the life we led the year before. Our cinematic favourites of the festive season are wistful portals and nostalgic blankets. Whether your Christmas movie of choice is Die HardBrazil, or It’s A Wonderful Life, there is something innocent about the ritual Christmas viewing, even if it involves John McClane running over broken glass, Sam Lowry being tormented by bureaucracy, or George Bailey contemplating suicide.

Bill Forsyth’s Comfort and Joy is another film deserving a seat at the Christmas table. It has the quiet dignity of an old Christmas jumper, albeit one with a distinctly odd pattern. As a Christmas odyssey of an everyman who, in mid-1980s Glasgow, gets caught in the middle of a preposterous turf war between two rival ice cream merchants, viewers will be surprised in equal measure by its farcical plot and its genuine lack of cynicism. It is a pleasure to laugh at our hero, Alan “Dicky” Bird, as he navigates his way out of his melancholy and becomes a version of himself he needs to be. The so-called normal life of today seems deeply unfunny by comparison.

It could be argued, in the vein of the famous “It’s Shite Being Scottish” monologue in Trainspotting, that the Scotland of the 1980s was not a place to get overly nostalgic about. In particular, Glasgow’s reputation as a rough, ship-building city is obviously not unwarranted. The real-world “Glasgow Ice Cream Wars” involved gangs using ice cream vans as cover for organised criminal activity. Bill Forsyth was not naive to these rough edges of his city. His debut, That Sinking Feeling, is charming but has a more kitchen-sink approach to Glasgow, so much so that American critic Vincent Canby described it as a film “in which just about everyone has a skin problem.”

With this in mind, the gentle, fable-like quality of Comfort and Joy deliberately eschews some of the harder realities of its time and setting, making it somewhat reactionary even back in 1984. Glasgow, warts and all, has been put under the magnifying glass by other filmmakers (the recovering-alcoholic drama of Ken Loach’s My Name is Joe, the doldrums escape fantasy of Lynne Ramsay’s Ratcatcher). Every time I watch Comfort and Joy, I realise it deserves a place in the pantheon of cracked-up, mock-Homeric Odysseys, alongside the likes of After Hours or The Big Lebowski. It must be very enticing for a director to make an artistically ponderous slice of miserabilist social realism, and it says a lot that Comfort and Joy is a feel-good film instead.

In the years since Comfort and Joy’s 1984 release, we have seen changes in Scotland, the UK, and Europe that make the film seem much older than it actually is. In 2013, the decapitation in broad London daylight of British soldier Lee Rigby was a formative event for me. I recall how my father, born and raised in Fife and never shy to throw a playful barb at the English, pivoted to a more general sense of British solidarity. “That should be the end of that”, he remarked in reference to the obvious literal and symbolic incursion. Sadly, that was not the end of that.

Instead, Scotland received its own dose of all the unfortunate byproducts of forced diversity in Europe: Sharia councilsgrooming gangs, a Glasgow where almost a third of the children don’t speak English as their first language, and a former first minister who has volleyed openly hostile, anti-white rhetoric towards native Scots. Curiously, the first minister in question, Mr. Humza Yousaf, was born into the Glaswegian world of Comfort and Joy in 1985, one year after the film’s release. Who could have foreseen what was coming down the pike?

In the wrong kind of mood, a film like Comfort and Joy can feel confusing and depressing when weighed up against these shifting realities. At a time when the holiday season in Europe routinely requires barriers to stop vehicular terror attacks at Christmas markets, Bill Forsyth’s story of opportunity and ice cream can feel rather quaint. There’s an irony, too, when we consider the fact that the film believes in the possibility of some sort of meaningful reconciliation with foreigners. An important part of our protagonist’s character arc, after all, is asserting himself with an entrepreneurial tact and ingenuity amongst the Italian and Chinese communities of his neighborhood.

The presence in Forsyth’s story of small Italian and Chinese groups is proportionally incomparable to the growing feeling of the present day, recently admitted even by Labour PM Keir Starmer, of the UK being “an island of strangers.” Comfort and Joy still had a romanticism about being part of a bigger world because the wider world was further away. The radio playing in the background of many scenes gives us updates about the Panda Diplomacy of the 1980s and the political strife in Burundi. This situates the Ice Cream Turf War, absurdly, in a global context. Although played for laughs, the gesture of Panda Diplomacy and the tensions in Burundi come to represent a more profound choice our character needs to make about his own inner torpor. He needs only to solve his own problems, not the entire world’s.

There is a lesson here for the viewer to both temper and take seriously their reactionary spirit. Forsyth’s Comfort and Joy, as the poster tagline says, is “a serious comedy.” We should take it seriously and allow it to uplift us, lest we get too lost in comparing and contrasting. In keeping with our Scottish theme, let’s reflect on the past and the future by remembering the words of Robert Burns’ “To a Mouse”, which the children of Scotland, whatever language they may speak, are hopefully still learning at school:

Still, thou art blest, compar’d wi’ me!
The present only toucheth thee:
But Och! I backward cast my e’e,
On prospects drear!
An’ forward tho’ I canna see,
I guess ‘an fear!

Bill Forsyth’s Comfort and Joy has the quiet dignity of an old Christmas jumper, albeit one with a distinctly odd pattern.
Robert S. Cairns is a film critic and ‘recovering academic’ with research interests in philosophy, theology, and conservatism in the movies.

Source: A Nostalgic Scottish Christmas: Comfort and Joy 42 Christmases Later

10 Christmas classics you may have missed

The most wonderful time of the year brings with it some of the most wonderful movies. No doubt you’ve already seen A Christmas StoryIt’s a Wonderful LifeElfThe Shop Around the Corner, A Christmas Carol (the Alastair Sim version, of course), and other perennial favorites, but why stop there? Here are some under-appreciated gems to freshen up your seasonal watchlist.

The Apartment (1960)

Trailer for The Apartment (Uploaded to YouTube by Amazon MGM Studios)

Billy Wilder’s Best Picture winner stars Jack Lemmon as a lonely bachelor and insurance-office drone who lets company executives use his apartment for a trysting place in hopes of a promotion. One of the trysts involves his own unrequited crush (Shirley MacLaine), attached to his boss (Fred MacMurray). Office politics, adultery, sexual harassment, and attempted suicide don’t suggest holiday cheer, but by the time New Year’s Eve rolls around, Wilder supplies a hard-earned happy ending. Available on Tubi.

Bell, Book and Candle (1958)

Clip from Bell, Book and Candle (Uploaded to YouTube by Turner Classic Movies)

All modern-day witch Kim Novak wants for Christmas is otherwise engaged upstairs neighbor James Stewart. With help from her feline familiar, Pyewacket, she casts a spell that puts a supernatural twist on the classic rom-com. Fun fact: My wife loved this movie so much growing up that she named her cat Pyewacket. Available on Tubi.

Comfort and Joy (1984)

Glasgow radio DJ Dickie Bird (Bill Paterson) gets an unexpected new lease on life after a devastating holiday breakup when he’s drawn into an escalating feud between two rival ice cream companies. Bill Forsyth’s follow-up to his beloved Local Hero has that film’s off-center charm and an understated heartwarming Christmas message. By all rights, it should be a holiday classic, but it’s tough to find — it’s unavailable to stream and out of print on home video, though DVD and Blu-ray copies can still be purchased through Amazon.

The Lemon Drop Kid (1951)

“Silver Bells” from The Lemon Drop Kid (Uploaded to YouTube by Casgo)

“Silver Bells,” one of the most beloved Christmas songs, was introduced in one of Bob Hope’s best non-Road comedies about a race track tout who has just 23 days until Christmas to come up with the $10,000 he owes a decidedly uncharitable mobster. That “Silver Bells” was not even nominated for Best Original Song is one of the Academy’s most grievous snubs. Watching block after block of New Yorkers singing along with Bob Hope and Marilyn Maxwell is what Christmas is all about. Available on Amazon Prime Video.

The Man Who Came to Dinner (1942)

Trailer for The Man Who Came to Dinner (Uploaded to YouTube by Warner Bros. Rewind)

Unwanted holiday guests are the worst — especially for the Ohio family forced to accommodate world-renowned radio personality Sheridan Whiteside after he injures himself on their property. Wheelchair-bound, the imperious Whiteside takes wicked delight in meddling in the family’s affairs and running roughshod over everyone else, including his beleaguered nurse, who finally vows, “Anything I can do to exterminate the human race will fill me with the greatest of pleasure.” Monty Woolley recreates his signature stage role in this classic Kaufman and Hart comedy. Available on Tubi.

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