Mike McCahill 

The Amber Light review – warming treatise on whisky’s liquid gold

This agreeable documentary combines the social history of drinking whisky with a tour of Scotland
  
  

Cooking up medicinal whisky … The Amber Light
Cooking up medicinal whisky … The Amber Light Photograph: PR

Adam Park’s documentary opens with a title card acknowledging that “the story of whisky is a familiar one”, before carving out its own distinct and distinctly engaging niche. It’s less interested in the business side of whisky than its social aspect: how this liquid gold has been drunk through the ages.

To this end, Park joins the whisky scholar Dave Broom on a tour of Scotland, and those sites where the drink was originated, developed, reclaimed and knocked back. Invariably – this having clearly been one of documentary’s more enjoyable shoots – their itinerary involves Broom taking a dram or two himself. The title refers to the impeccably hip watering hole the film concludes in, but also to the warm, convivial glow radiating out from the screen.

Park and Broom cover a lot of ground, at a distiller’s measured pace. Opening on Islay, with an immensely watchable primer on peat-cutting, they cook up medicinal whisky in woodland and visit East Fife’s new microbrewery hotspot, between trips inland to city pubs for rendezvous with such eminent thinkers and drinkers as Ian Rankin and Alasdair Gray. This quasi-magazine show treatment permits Park and Broom multiple lines of approach to the roots of Scottish drinking culture: whisky as a bringer of warmth, and a means of reconnecting with the land. It also permits some re-examination of stereotypes. As Rankin euphemistically observes, “Sometimes [whisky] brings out the worst in you”, providing the film’s own “drink responsibly” disclaimer.

The broad remit means there are places where it might seem wobbly or fuzzy-headed: I wasn’t sure Broom’s musician pals brought much to the table, beyond drinking songs that admittedly break up the talk. Yet the camera keeps landing on the kind of satisfying, weathered textures you’d want from any glass of Glenlivet, while Gray raises the suggestion that Scotland remains a series of islands squashed together into co-existence, which may be worth considering as the independence debate grows louder.

Extremely good company, this is a film made for nippy late-November afternoons.

 

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