I SWEAR
Directing: B+
Acting: A-
Writing: B+
Cinematography: B
Editing: B+
I Swear follows familiar formula beats, it’s transparently manipulative, and it’s also a wonderful moviegoing experience, a great exercise in empathy. Sometimes it’s good to remember why formulas exist: because they work.
The bit of infamy around this film is really unfortunate. It was nominated for five BAFTA Awards, and won two of them (Best Leading Actor and Best Casting), where John Davidson himself, the man with Tourette’s on whom the lead character is based, was a guest. He experienced some ticks that the film I Swear does an excellent job of explaining, and which was rather unfortunate in context—I don’t need to tell you what he said or who he said it to; the incident was covered endlessly in the press. What’s really important to remember here is that the presenters of the BAFTA ceremony were less sensitive than this film itself, which is absolutely worth seeing.
The script, written by director Kirk Jones, is even more sensitive than many of us remember the era being depicted being. The first act of the film focuses on Davidson as a 14-year-old (Scott Ellis Watson, who is excellent), and when the emergence of John’s ticks screw up his chances with a soccer scout, the scout actually asks the coach, “Is he disabled?” In this kind of working class environment in 1983 Scotland? I was so sure that the guy would have used a far worse word that it actually took me out of the movie for a moment. Later, that very word is used by John himself, and we hear it only the one time, but it’s quite pointedly used as an example of a person with Tourette Syndrome having wildly inappropriate outbursts that he doesn’t mean and can’t control.
Which is to say, there’s a noticeable element of I Swear that makes it a clear product of 2025 even though it’s ostensibly set mostly in the eighties and nineties. There’s an argument to be made for the utility of this approach, however, as this is a film that means to educate its audience about people with Tourette’s. I’ve certainly never seen a film so pointedly about the condition, with the protagonist a character who has it.
I’d be interested in how actual people with Tourette’s, or the people in their lives, feel about this movie. Presumably they mostly understand that some artistic license comes with the territory, and perhaps are relieved that this film takes pains not to sensationalize the condition. Not only is I Swear deeply empathetic with John Davidson, but it also empathizes with the people who struggle to understand him, including his mother, Heather (Shirley Henderson), and a frustrated school headmaster (Ron Donachie).
The story does glean over John’s relationship with his parents a bit. His father leaves the family, for which John blames himself, and the film leaves it a bit ambiguous as to whether he might be right. When Dottie (Maxine Peake), the mother of one of John’s friends, offers her home to John, he and his mother become seemingly and inexplicably semi-estranged, as Dot quickly moves in as a far more understanding mother figure. She has a background as a nurse in mental health, we’re told, so she approaches John with—as Dot herself characterizes nurses when she observes Heather was also a nurse—the patience of a saint.
We see John get predictably bullied and teased the more his ticks and outbursts come out, eventually culminating in, at separate times, a bar brawl and an outright physical assault against him. These characters are nothing more than tools for our sympathy, and most of the people who get close to John as an adult are characterized without any real flaws. As such, I Swear is hardly flawless—and yet, that doesn’t make it any less essential. The focus is always on John, as it should be, and Robert Aramayo’s spectacular performance as John is not to be missed. I was consistently moved by the portrayal, and you would do well to have tissues handy.
There’s a particularly memorable scene in which another person, a young woman, is brought by her parents to meet John, just so she can meet another person with the same condition for the first time. This sequence occurs in two parts, first when John gets into the backseat of a car with her, and later when they are hanging out together on a patio. In both cases, we see these two characters connect with each other in ways they had heretofore been unable to connect with anyone else, ever before. Anyone who has been othered due to their differences and then found community with people who were like them is bound to relate.
I Swear, for its clear imperfections, actually somewhat exceeded my expectations. I went in expecting a perfectly fine drama about a guy who did his part to make things better for people like him. What I encountered was an eminently entertaining and moving film that uses movie conventions to its advantage by leaning into them. I Swear may not be perfect but it is deeply affecting and extremely effective.
It has charms you simply won’t be able to resist, even as it hurls insults at you.
Overall: B+
