by Anna
Twenty-five years, a new British filmmaker made a dark splash at Cannes. Danny Boyle’s directorial debut Shallow Grave, which would become a significant sleeper success in 1995, opens with flatmates David (Christopher Eccleston), Juliet (Kerry Fox) and Alex (Ewan McGregor) looking for a new boarder (and subsequently trolling the prospective candidates). They settle on Hugo (Keith Allen) but he dies from a drug overdose within hours of moving in. Then the trio find a suitcase full of money under Hugo’s bed, and that’s where the plot (and the meaning behind the film’s title) really kicks off.
Roughly a decade of award-winning films from the likes of Stephen Frears and David Attenborough, Boyle came and turned British cinema as a whole on its ear...
That’s not to say audiences were getting tired of movies from the former, far from it. It’s just – as is the case with many things in life – a change of pace is just what an audience craves. It’s fine for the first few years but once the ten-year mark hits, that’s when the next-big name becomes passé. (This is, also, unfortunately the case with many actresses.) Anyway, the point is that with the arrival of Boyle and his film, British cinema started to focus on darker subject matter (Mike Leigh’s Naked also arrived in the mid 90s.)
There was a certain gamble in making this film. The budgetary restrictions (said budget being only £1 million with most of it going towards building the flat’s set) were so severe, props had to be auctioned off in order to get the money needed for film stock. And not only was this Boyle’s directing debut, but it was also the first screenplay by John Hodge (who makes a cameo in the film as a police inspector) and the first starring role for Ewan McGregor (he had made his film debut that same year in Bill Forsyth’s Being Human). Still, filming went without a hitch and wrapped in thirty days.
Boyle also had the right idea in having his three leads live together for several weeks before filming began to have their interactions in the film feel more natural. And in doing so, the moments of high tension throughout the film feel even more taut. Boy, is that finale a whopper. (Speaking of which, does anyone know if Eccleston, Fox and/or McGregor ever collaborated on another project together?)
If you’re familiar enough with Boyle’s later films, it’s fun to keep an eye out when watching Shallow Grave for the hallmarks you'll often find in them. Unlikeable protagonists? Check. Large amount of money used as a MacGuffin? Check. The opening shot is one from the middle of the film? Check. Bright, colorful landscapes? Check. Effective use of music editing? Check.
Shallow Grave served as a launching pad for many of the people involved. Boyle, McGregor, Hodge, and producer Andrew Macdonald would follow up their success two years later with Trainspotting. All three leads would go on to become regular fixtures in film and television, with Ewan McGregor ascending to major international fame by the end of the 1990s. Both leading men would dabble in sci-fi early in the next decade (McGregor with the Star Wars prequels, Eccleston with his one-season tenure on Doctor Who) while Fox stirred up controversy with sexually explicit scenes with Mark Rylance in her Silver Bear-winning role in Intimacy (2000). But most of all Shallow Grave was a sensational calling card for a filmmaker who would become even more successful over the next quarter century. While Shallow Grave tends to get overshadowed by Boyle’s later films like 28 Days Later and his Oscar-winning Slumdog Millionaire, it’s very hard to deny its worth as one of the best directorial debuts ever made.