If you’re of a certain age, Danny Boyle’s 1996 film “Trainspotting” was an earth-shattering, mind-expanding event. There was a Before “Trainspotting” and an After “Trainspotting,” which was accompanied by a sudden affinity for ambient electronica, Scottish accents and buzz cuts. There has never been anything more heroin chic than “Trainspotting,” and in capturing the world of Irvine Welsh’s novel, Boyle made something fresh, new and edgy that wasn’t just of the zeitgeist — it defined the zeitgeist.
The angry, existential “Choose Life” speech delivered by Ewan McGregor’s Renton perfectly captured the angst of ’90s modernity, and 20 years later, there has never been a moment more ripe for another one. Perhaps that’s why Boyle and the gang got back together to revisit the old Edinburgh haunts in “T2 Trainspotting.”
They may be grayer, but the gang remains remarkably the same. Renton returns back to his hometown after a health scare (in the gym of all places, yuppie scum) to find Sick Boy (Jonny Lee Miller), Spud (Ewen Bremner) and Begbie (Robert Carlyle) much the same as when he left — which was when he screwed his pals out of several thousand pounds while making off with the score from a heroin deal.
John Hodge, who was Oscar-nominated for the “Trainspotting” screenplay, is back to adapt Welsh’s characters to the screen in “T2.” Borrowing some plot details from the follow-up novel, “Porno,” the story follows Renton’s return and attempt to mend fences with his old friend Sick Boy, which involves trying to open up a brothel with the help of his Bulgarian sex worker girlfriend, Veronika (Anjela Nedyalkova). Begbie, in prison, is raring to get back to the world, while Spud is generally fed up with junkie life.