Broken Review
By Rich Cline
While this strikingly well-made film is a great calling card for rising-star filmmaker Norris, it's also so relentlessly dark and unsettling that it's difficult to see the point of it all. This is such a bleak coming-of-age tale that it almost obscures any hope at all, focussing a series of horrific incidents into a confined space that gives the actors and filmmaker a change to shine, but leaves the audience exhausted.
It's set in a North London cul-de-sac, where the pre-teen Skunk (Laurence) lives with her big brother Jed (Milner), her single dad (Roth) and her nanny Kasia (Marjanovic). But her happy life is thrown into chaos when violence erupts: hotheaded widower Bob (Kinnear) storms across the street and punches simple-minded Rick (Emms), seemingly for no reason, triggering a series of events that Skunk struggles to understand. And Bob's three daughters seem to be just as violent. One (Bryant) is mercilessly bullying Skunk at school, while another (Daveney) is seducing Jed.
The way so many story elements circle around Skunk makes the film feel almost like a stage play. Everyone is so interconnected that we wonder if much of this exists only in her mind. For example, Kasia has just started a relationship with Skunk's schoolteacher (Murphy), who has been accused of abusing one of Bob's daughters. And there are even more issues that put Skunk in both emotional and physical peril, including a new boyfriend (Sergeant) who might have to move away and the fact that she has Type 1 diabetes. And Skunk's world seems to be limited to her street and a junkyard across the field.
Director Norris uses all of this to invoke a surreal fairy tale atmosphere, with lush camerawork and jittery editing. It's strikingly well made, with especially strong acting from the entire cast. Laurence delivers in a break-out role that will deservedly get her noticed, while Roth and especially Kinnear invest themselves fully in the emotionally fraught worlds of their characters. And the rest of the young cast is just as transparent. In fact, if it weren't for the remarkable performances, this film would be very difficult to watch, as the actors manage to transcend the otherwise grim, pretentious narrative.
Rich Cline

Facts and Figures
Year: 2012
Genre: Dramas
Run time: 91 mins
In Theaters: Friday 8th March 2013
Distributed by: Film Movement
Production compaines: BBC Films, Bill Kenwright Films
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 3 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 63%
Fresh: 32 Rotten: 19
IMDB: 7.3 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Rufus Norris
Producer: Tally Garner, Bill Kenwright, Dixie Linder, Nick Marston
Screenwriter: Mark O'Rowe
Starring: Tim Roth as Archie, Eloise Laurence as Skunk, Cillian Murphy as Mike Kiernan, Zana Marjanovic as Kasia, Robert Emms as Rick Buckley, Rory Kinnear as Bob Oswald, Rosalie Kosky as Susan Oswald (as Rosalie Kosky-Hensman), Bill Milner as Jed, Denis Lawson as Mr. Buckley, Clare Burt as Mrs. Buckley, George Sargeant as Dillon, Faye Daveney as Saskia, Martha Bryant as Sunrise, Lily James as Older Skunk
Also starring: Bill Kenwright, Dixie Linder