The Violators (2015)
9/10
'The Violators' is mirror-bright, uncommonly vital independent cinema.
9 December 2021
The auspicious film-making debut by terrifically talented writer/director Helen Walsh proved to be a remarkably assured affair, one of the more striking aspects of Walsh's remarkably dynamic indie feature is the searing authenticity of the performances from a gifted cast of largely unknown actors, their unfamiliarity a considerable blessing, adding a stark verisimilitude to 'The Violators' kitchen sink milieu, an unflinchingly bleak, heartfelt, energetically told tale of the not-so-quiet desperation of broken lives on a greatly deprived sinkhole estate in one of the more demonstratively rundown suburbs of Cheshire. Helen Walsh's surgical dissection of the devastating existential malaise fulminating within a decayed North England suburb is a witheringly earnest, frequently raw, emotionally complex, laudably unsentimental portrayal of damaged pretty teenager Shelly (Lauren McQueen), her increasingly fractured young life cruelly degraded by a grossly abusive father, this remarkably durable teenager's unlovely, unnurtured penurious half-life being a ceaselessly dispiriting descent into paltry, repetitive acts of petty theft, listless drug-taking, terminal truancy, and a profoundly isolating sense of disenfranchisement, Shelly's sole, tenuous grip on humanity being the love she feels for her younger, sweet-natured, BMX-riding brother Jerome (Callum King Chadwick), and her fractious friendship with the handsome, seemingly inviolable Soldier-boy-next-door Kieran (Liam Ainsworth). After an apparently random encounter with the eminently enigmatic middle-class misfit Rachel (Brogan Ellis) these two disparate, dysfunctional young lives become fatefully intertwined, the eerily beautiful Rachel forcefully acting as the singularly strange catalyst for a series of shocking, startlingly dramatic events that grievously culminate in a genuinely fascinating, emotionally engaging climax. 'The Violators' is mirror-bright, uncommonly vital independent cinema, with endearingly authentic performances, constrictor taut plotting, and an empathic director who clearly has a sympathy for the desperate plight of her all too real protagonists.
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