NEDs
Director: Peter Mullan
Starring: Peter Mullan
Details: UK / 124mins (18).
It's Glasgow, 1972, and young John McGill (Forrest) has just graduated from primary school; the brother of the notorious Benny (Joey Szula), the studious John couldn't be more different with a bright future ahead of him. However, the teachers in his new school, with their humiliating tactics and liberal use of the belt, are bullies and no comfort can be found at home, where John's abused mother (Goodall) is still loyal to his drunken father (Mullan). Slowly, John (who has grown up into McCarron) is sucked into the gang that hang out on his estate, and his twitchy personality is always in danger of tipping him over into a full-blown sociopath.
Neds is a socially conscious violence-inherited-in-the system film but Mullan, in his third outing as a director (after Orphans and The Magdalene Sisters), delivers a character so compelling that even when he's slicing faces and dropping gravestones on heads, John doesn't lose the audience's affections. Mullan directs these fight scenes without flair or style, making them all too horribly real. John's transformation from a rosy-cheeked, shy teenager into the dead-eyed, blade-waving thug doesn't go as smoothly as Mullan would hope, but once that awkward transition is made it's plain sailing... until the story gets shaky towards the close for reasons this review can't get into for spoiler reasons.
To single out one performance in a movie that has many is hard but it's McCarron that makes it easy to forgive Neds' clunkier moments. A dead ringer for a young Ray Winstone, McCarron has a cool and confident power that belies his experience. Able to spit Mullan's tough dialogue (the Glasgow accent is at times hard to understand) with ease, McCarron's talent really shines when he's asked to say everything with his eyes: one scene sees him confront his father with only a steely gaze. Spine-shivering stuff.
Review by Gavin Burke
Your Comments
noel
Absolute rubbish boring boring movie has nothing going for it!!! avoid this dreadful movie.
Posted 25/01/2011 16:55:01
Bunny Starr
well... imagine Trainspotting without the glamour.. Imagine Gregory's girl without the soccer, Scum without the prison, Taxi Driver without the schmaltz.... look into the dark heart of modernism and you are coming close to NEDs ... Mullan' study of an alpha male "disperser" is grim gritty and compelling... the germination from timid altar-boy through the crysallis of applied latin scholar to venomous sociopath, this is one amazing study of Nature versus Nurture that excites, repulses and questions all in equal measure... the film works on many levels.. the other characters are mere relefections of what could be depending on what path is taken, and what is all the more rewarding is the enforced period in the wilderness(a boiler outlet in a tower block) before a further spiral down an avenue of self loathing and glue sniffing leads to the ultimate in violence and evil, but we are left to ask... what chance had he got, with a father permanently drunk and violent with a penchant for marital violence, and an older brother predisposed to criminality... strangely there is an innocence and confusion, and despite some very disturbing scenes ... there is a glimpse of redemption, where he faces his sins and learns to live with them in the final and touching scene
Posted 29/01/2011 14:20:55
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