This is England Movie Review
This is England Review

"This is England" Overview

Rating: NR
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Shane MeadowsProducer : Mark Herbert
Screenwiter : Shane Meadows
Starring : Thomas Turgoose,Stephen Graham,Jo Hartley,Joseph Gilgun,Andrew Shim
If Shane Meadows faltered with his vigilante drama Dead Man's Shoes, he makes
up for it with room to spare in his latest, This is England. Evoking England in
the early 1980s down to the hideous sweaters and burgeoning slang, no other
film at this year's Tribeca Film Festival felt as sincere or nostalgic as
Meadows' parable of masculine influence and the role of paterfamilias on
youthful worship.
As a prattling, chubby boy, Shaun (Thomas Turgoose) is the fall-out of
decimated British pride. Living fatherless from the Falklands War (which
ushered in the days of Margaret Thatcher), angst-ridden Shaun drifts through
the rotted-carpet apartments and graffiti-strewn building of a sorry-ass town
at the butt-end of nowhere. His angst finds a home, however, when he meets a
group of skinhead-punks led by the charismatic Woody (Joseph Gilgun). Woody and
his boys wear tight Doc Martens, tucked-in polos, and skinny suspenders: the
necessary look for the English Rude Boy, the deterrent to the New Wave. In
Woody, Shaun finds a father and a brother that his time-period has left him
wanting.
Though Woody and his gang aren't violent, the same cannot be said for Woody's
long-lost father/brother figure Combo (Stephen Graham). Combo comes home from
prison with a nationalist chip on his shoulder, preparing to find soldiers for
what he calls the battle for national pride. Woody's old enough not to buy it,
but the only thing more powerful than a father to Shaun is a grandfather.
Triggering the pain and hatred from his father's death, Combo soon has Shaun
threatening Pakistani shop-owners and looking to Combo for his next move.
Combo's motives, however, are easily recognizable as something more to do with
masculine insecurities than any sort of nationalist logic.
Meadows shows a strengthening in form here, but also in his attention as a
screenwriter. The defectors in Woody's gang are all seen for their insecurities
in early scenes, with the exception of one truly political member who is tossed
by Combo's wayside after nay-saying the Nationalist lead speaker. Shaun's
mother (Jo Hartley) doesn't see the essential differences between the Woody
skinheads and Combo's skinheads, allowing Shaun to be ushered into a racist
mindset. Mirroring this with Combo's inability to woo Woody's girlfriend,
Meadows not only diagnoses the need for masculine leadership in youth but the
damages of a motherless existence as one grows older.
Combo is a creation of pure psychological schism and Graham, in an explosive
performance, finds all the brute machismo and misguided hope in his character.
Turgoose expertly balances the skinhead pathos and misguided sentiments in
Shaun, and Meadows makes good on his surroundings, making Shaun's terrain as
hopeless as the national identity. Shaun's girlfriend wears caked make-up and
sports rat's-nest hair: She is the American 1980s superimposed on the English
1980s. But Shaun, with his long black coat and shaved head, has no intimations
towards another nationality: Shaun is England.
Fab five.
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Review by Chris Cabin
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