Eye For Film >> Movies >> The Selfish Giant (2013) Film Review
The Selfish Giant
Reviewed by: Angus Wolfe Murray
Northern grit. Boys breaking away, rejecting school. And the rest. Home, etc. Thieving.
Teachers know this type only too well. Expelling them would be irresponsible. Excluding them for limited periods might force parents to get a grip. Or let them loose onto the forsaken streets like slaves of the underclass.
Arbor (Connor Chapman) and Swifty (Shaun Thomas) are not yet teenage. Arbor feeds off adrenaline. Swifty is slower, more gentle ("I'm thick like everyone says"). He has a feel for horses, which comes in handy when they take a nag and cart, nicking electrical cable for Kitten (Sean Gilder), the local scrap merchant.
It would be easy to label this a Ken Loach copy, swapping the kestrel for a pony as its emotional hook. But there is so much more. Writer/director Clio Barnard's work with these children matches her skill in empathising with the surviving nature of these once thriving industrial heartlands.
The story has tragic elements and yet its search for a life less deprived fuels the fire. Arbor's energy is wasted on challenging authority. He's smart, brave and ingenious in the craft of getting by. Swifty is a follower, a disciple, fascinated by the pony trap racing that Kitten enters in the early dawn light along deserted duel carriageways.
Something is happening to British cinema. The Girls Are Coming! Already you have Lynne Ramsay (Ratcatcher) and Andrea Arnold (Red Road). Now Barnard joins them.
It is a wonderful thing to see - such talent, such confidence, such honesty.
Reviewed on: 16 Jan 2014