- Culture
- 29 Oct 13
BRITISH SOCIAL REALISM MEETS MODERN FAIRYTALE IN HEARTBREAKING FRIENDSHIP FILM
Translating the lyrical prose of Oscar Wilde into Bradford mumbles, and trading the picturesque idyll of his magic garden for decaying post-industrial estates, Clio Barnard (The Arbor) presents us with a modern version of an old-fashioned fable. Here, adults wrong children, through greed or merely neglect; paths to adventure are deathly dangerous; love may or may not save you.
Striking opening shots of mossy green fields and midnight blue starry skies give way to the drab greys of scrap-yards. Barnard introduces our two young heroes, 13-year-olds Arbor and Swifty (Conner Chapman and Shaun Thomas; both newcomers, both extraordinary). The former is an ADHD sufferer with a vicious temper, mischievous wit and impermeable swagger; the latter a sensitive old soul with a protective streak. As they begin stealing metal and copper cable for shady dealer Kitten (Sean Gilder, intimidating and heart-wrenching), the film moves from keenly observed urban milieu to a dark coming-of-age tale to a hugely emotive friendship yarn.
The bleak social commentary and poetic style evoke a blend of Ken Loach and Steve McQueen, as the bold, brooding cinematography lends a vividly mythical quality to the boys’ small journeys.
Though the setting, dialogue and humour is earthy, rusty and rough, there’s a tenderness and spirituality to Barnard’s storytelling that elevates it far beyond the class-focused voyeurism that can too often dominate British social realism. A heartbreaking tale about two boys realising they’re not indestructible - but their friendship assuredly is.