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10 Essential Cinematic AntiheroesThe title track to Drew’s iLL Manors rings out like a poisoned ode to David Cameron’s "Broken Britain." Think what you like about the politics surrounding it all, it’s refreshing to see a popular artist putting his head above the parapet and fighting the corner of what he perceives to be Britain’s disadvantaged youth. He believes society has failed to nurture them, that the media has subsequently demonised them through terms such as "chav." Now he’s rapping about them and representing them as best he can. Except, he’s not just rapping about them, he’s gone and made a whole film about them. The aforementioned song actually serves as the title track on the "iLL Manors" soundtrack.
Taking place over the course of seven days in an East-London suburb, the film weaves together eight core characters who are all caught up in some way in a depressingly grim world of violence and deprivation. For their part, when introducing each new story, the raps work well. You’re almost willing the next story to begin at stages to hear Drew spit out some more lyrics set to a pounding bassline and deftly constructed montage that can articulate some of his ideas far better than some of his other clumsy filmmaking can. They inject a fresh verve and pace into the scenes, and give them an importance and immediacy that the time-jumping narrative often needs. While Drew may be still learning his trade in terms of filmmaking, he’s clearly light-years ahead as a lyricist and musician.
And boy, when Drew really hones in on that message within the stories, he really hits the nail on the head. When a drug dealer guns down a child in a cruel act of revenge we briefly see the dealer depicted as the same child we saw during the montage sequence in which he was introduced. It’s a chilling moment, and one of many that really makes you question whether these characters ever had a chance. Was there ever any possibility that Anouska Mond’s Michelle wouldn’t end up having to prostitute herself to pay back a drug dealer, or any eventuality where Natalie Press’ Katya doesn’t feel compelled to abandon her baby on a train? How does a community and a society deteriorate to the extent that a child gets his hands on a gun? Are these characters condemned by nature or nurture, or should they also be bearing some of the responsibility themselves? These are the questions that Drew is constantly (and successfully) urging you to ask.
Slick and awkward in equal measure, and definitely not an easy watch, look closely enough and there’s something pertinent right at the heart of Drew’s debut. In a year in which we’re told that the eyes of the world will be on London as the city celebrates the Diamond Jubilee and hosts the Olympics, it’s only fair that there’s someone out there trying to put forward an alternative view. [B-]
"iLL Manors" opens in the U.K. today. No release date for the U.S. has yet been set.
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