The Movie Waffler New to BFI Player - TYPIST ARTIST PIRATE KING | The Movie Waffler

New to BFI Player - TYPIST ARTIST PIRATE KING

New to BFI Player - TYPIST ARTIST PIRATE KING
Troubled artist Audrey Amiss embarks on a road trip with her nurse.

Review by Benjamin Poole

Directed by: Carol Morley

Starring: Monica Dolan, Kelly Macdonald, Gina McKee, Kieran Bew, Christine Bottomley


In 2015 filmmaker Carol Morley was awarded Screenwriting Fellowship from the Wellcome Trust - an organisation dedicated to "research into life, health and wellbeing" - and was subsequently granted access to their archives, including voluminous material from British artist Audrey Amiss. Amiss was a sufferer of paranoid schizophrenia and had a bipolar disorder, which meant that she was hospitalised for large periods of her working life with her art re-discovered and recognised following her death in 2013. According to critic Eilís Doolan, Amiss was "a woman wholly preoccupied with artmaking, collecting, and recording," an artist whose entire reality was committed to creating meaning from her context, to seeing the patterns and significance in all that surrounds us: her scrapbooks constitute painstaking evaluation of the everyday, such as witty deconstructions of food labelling to collections of tickets annotated with their significance to Amiss (with her apparent fascination of pop culture and postmodern awareness, if she had been born in NY and not Sunderland she would perhaps be described as Warholian). Her actual art is beautifully simplistic in that way that only the truly gifted achieve: watercolour strokes and sharp charcoal strikes delineating people on the tube, in the park, etc. An overlooked genius, it is no wonder that Morley, whose previous work includes the documentary Dreams of a Life, was instantly smitten with Amiss' work and biography.


In the Q&A following the preview screening (in pleasing congruity with Typist Pirate Artist King's narrative, Morley is touring cinemas across Britain with the film), Morley reasoned that she wanted to make Typist Pirate Artist King as a fictionalised account of Audrey and her psychiatric nurse (played respectively by god Monica Dolan and Kelly Macdonald, two of our absolute favourites) travelling cross country to exhibit Amiss' work in a gallery, as Amiss "wouldn't have liked people talking about her."


It is synchronous that Amiss, who lived her life within art, becomes art, and much like the bricolage craft which Amiss manufactured, Morley's film takes a similar scrapbook approach. In the film's early scenes, Audrey's life and precarious mental state is expressed via vivid expressionism of woozy red lighting and the pointed symbolism of blobs of black paint. As the narrative continues we pass through social realism, comedy, and a specifically British approach to character (à la Alan Bennett or Victoria Wood); all of which is communicated within a road movie structure.


Could it be argued that Audrey herself, via Dolan's chameleonic unvain performance, is a deconstruction of the insidious manic pixie girl archetype? As the film progresses we laugh with Audrey and her off-kilter approach to the world - her cavalier approach to social etiquette, her impeachable drive to create - but the film crucially allows us to be frustrated by her antics, and even scared for her (the most terrifying aspect of being with someone with acute psychosis is the helplessness you experience knowing that there is little you can do apart from stay calm, be soothing and hope against hope that the episode soon passes). A recognisably harrowing scene takes place at a hotel reception, where we see the full implications of Audrey's illness. Typist Pirate Artist King affects due to the meticulous balance of Dolan's performance and Morley's sensitive direction.


With her calm severity Macdonald is a perfect foil for the histrionics of Dolan's performance (Macdonald's voice: so peaceful), a veritable saint who negotiates Audrey through the picaresque of the journey (remember we clapped the NHS every week, made such a big deal of how heroic our nurses are, and then didn't really bother to pipe up when it faced further cuts? Keep clapping, yeah?). We see Audrey interact with a cross section of British society, and ultimately face up to the past in the welcome form of Gina McKee, in a road journey which probes polysemic emotion. Will Audrey and Sandra make it to MacGuffin gallery? If they don't, then there is comfort in the curation Typist Pirate Artist King offers: featuring frequent intertitles of Amiss' miscellaneous projects, the film itself becomes an exhibition of this overlooked artist, finally restoring the status her work deserves.

Typist Artist Pirate King
 is on BFI Player now.