Tremayne Miller, Film Critic |
Film Critic: LifestyleMK & HeyUGuys
Brotherhood
Dir: Noel Clarke
Screenplay: Noel Clarke
With: Noel Clarke, Olivia Chenery, Ashley Thomas, Nick
Nevern, Steven Cree, Tonia Sotiropoulou, Arnold Oceng, Aaron Eaton.
Running time: 1 hr, 45 min
Initial
release: 29 August, 2016
British multihyphenate, Noel Clarke returns
with "Brotherhood” to complete The Kidulthood
Trilogy Series.
The Trilogy began with "Kidulthood" in
2006, followed by "Adulthood" in 2008.
“Kidulthood” kickstarted
what Complex UK coined as the "British hood film movement," which
analysed the lives of a group of disillusioned teenagers within west London.
Directed by Menhaj Huda, with a script written by Noel
Clarke, who starred in the film, then went on to direct the sequel “Adulthood.” "Adulthood" (2008) picks up 6 years after
"Kidulthood," and follows Clarke, who is released
from prison after being found guilty of murder.
In "Brotherhood" Clarke reprises
his role as the lead protagonist, Sam, which is scheduled for release in the UK
to tie in with the 10-year anniversary release of the film
"Kidulthood."
“Brotherhood”
is a powerful drama with the right balance
of non-gratuitous violence and humour, a specific example of which is an
“awkward comedy” moment, when Arnold Oceng, who plays Henry lies
to his wife about who he’s on the phone to , and instead uses Tesco clubcard as
a cover-up. Comedy that’s written in such a way that it appears
off-the-cuff is a high skill, and in heightened form scenarios are made much
funnier as a result.
Before the private screening of “Brotherhood” got underway Noel Clarke, who
introduces it says it felt like his debut, and that this time around it
was about him collecting all the things from the other two
movies that were right.
Echoes of Clarke being a father of three in
real life are dotted throughout, one example being when Henry (Arnold
Oceng) defends Sam from the baddies, leading them to
believe that his son’s ninja turtle toy stowed underneath his non-gangster type
jacket is a gun!
I was stunned to learn that “Brotherhood”
is the only British Trilogy in existence but felt it a well put
together movie in its own right, where one responds most favourable
towards Sam, as if you are his sidekick. Rest assured you will get
up from your cinema seat with the biggest urge to immediately catch back to
back the first two films in the sequence!'
The
Guardian headline on 9
September reads ‘Brotherhood actor Aaron Eaton dies days after film's release.’ The 29-year-old played Teardrop in the third installment of The Kidulthood Films.
The cause of Eaton’s
death remains unclear but the film’s director, Noel Clarke and the grime rapper Stormzy, who also appear in the movie, were among those to pay
tribute.
Eaton, who
lived in south London, was nominated for best actor prize at the International
Achievement Recognition awards for the role he played in the 2015 British film Awol – Absent Without Love.
Brotherhood began its
preview run on 28 August and grossed £971,000 in its first few days of release,
with a total of£1.98 in the first week of opening.
c.
Tremayne Miller
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