A haunting, poetic coming-of-age drama that turns deprivation into vivid visual memory. It’s bleak, tender, and quietly surreal, with a strong sense of place and an unusually compassionate view of childhood under pressure.
86% ★★★★☆ (59,753)
Ratcatcher
Where to watch: Max
Movie · Drama · NR
1999 · 1h 34m · ★ 86% (60K)
Director: Lynne Ramsay
Starring: William Eadie, Tommy Flanagan, Mandy Matthews
Overview
James Gillespie is 12 years old. The world he knew is changing. Haunted by a secret, he has become a stranger in his own family. He is drawn to the canal where he creates a world of his own. He finds an awkward tenderness with Margaret Anne, a vulnerable 14 year old expressing a need for love in all the wrong ways, and befriends Kenny, who possesses an unusual innocence in spite of the harsh surroundings.
Director
Lynne Ramsay
Production
Pathé, BBC Film, Arts Council of England, Les Productions Lazennec, Le Studio Canal+, Holy Cow Films
Cast
William Eadie, Tommy Flanagan, Mandy Matthews
Where to watch
Max
Curator Review
Verdict
A haunting, poetic coming-of-age drama that turns deprivation into vivid visual memory. It’s bleak, tender, and quietly surreal, with a strong sense of place and an unusually compassionate view of childhood under pressure.
Best for
fans of lyrical social realism
viewers drawn to grimy urban atmosphere and dreamlike imagery
people who like intimate, child-centered dramas
audiences open to bleak material with flashes of beauty
Skip if
you want a conventional plot with clear resolutions
you’re looking for an uplifting or easy watch
you’re sensitive to child neglect, sexual menace, or severe poverty
you prefer fast-paced storytelling
Overview
Ratcatcher is one of those debuts that feels fully formed, as if Lynne Ramsay arrived already knowing exactly how to turn memory, guilt, and deprivation into cinema. Set against Glasgow’s garbage strike, it finds beauty in mud, water, light, and the small private rituals of a boy trying to survive a world that has little room for tenderness.
Worth noting
What makes it linger is the balance between harshness and grace. The film never softens the social reality around James, but it also refuses to reduce him to misery; his imagination, awkward friendships, and moments of wonder give the film its pulse. The result is a work of social realism that feels haunted rather than merely observed.
Bottom line
Its power is especially visual: the canal, the unfinished house, the fields, and the interiors all seem charged with emotional weather. Ratcatcher is sad, but not deadening; it’s a film about damage that still leaves space for longing, innocence, and the possibility of escape.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Laura (5★) · 1402 likes
james jumping out the window of the unfinished house into the endless golden field is one of my favorite moments of cinema – my eyes have welled up both times i’ve watched it. it is a bittersweet moment. to get to see a character that has been surrounded by coldness & filth be overtaken by warm tones. to watch him dive into it as if it was the canal he has known his whole life. a new place that feels untouched
Eli Hayes (5★) · 1087 likes
"Well, these conditions speak for themselves. You can't possibly deny that there is a very considerable health risk under which many of the good people of Glasgow are at present living. There's a risk in the form of decomposition of this material, a risk of fire, a risk of it being spread by rats, which are notorious vectors of disease." It's difficult for me to write about my very, very favorite films - and this is most certainly one of… more
stevie (3.5★) · 760 likes
It took me 45 minutes to realize they were speaking English I thought they were speaking Dutch or some shit
Framesofnick (3.5★) · 674 likes
Very dark portrayal of unfortunate childhood circumstances. The main kid James does a wonderful job making me grateful that I don’t have his life Theater I saw it at gave me home fries with a fried egg on top for brunch and i felt awkward as hell taking bites of the yummy ass food while the on screen moments were so woeful
r. marsh (5★) · 432 likes
Lynne Ramsay understands children. By setting her marvelous debut in Glasgow during the national garbage strike of the mid-1970's, the writer-director ensures that not one of the city's wayward youth has it easy. Many grow up too fast, become sexual deviants, and treat those who refuse to mature at their inappropriately rapid pace as playthings. Such is the case with James, the endearing protagonist, who in spite of all the grime and cruelty of the times is able to look
1979 · Drama, History, War · 2h 42m · R · Where to watch: Max
If the appeal is unsettling childhood memory rendered with surreal force, this is a strong match.
Themes
childhood alienation, working-class poverty, urban decay, guilt and secrecy, coming of age, family dysfunction, innocence under pressure, memory and trauma