Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuFollows a gang of small time crooks in an English town. Malc is in danger of losing his girlfriend Kate if he doesn't spend more time at home and the gang leader Jumbo looks like he is about... Alles lesenFollows a gang of small time crooks in an English town. Malc is in danger of losing his girlfriend Kate if he doesn't spend more time at home and the gang leader Jumbo looks like he is about to lose control.Follows a gang of small time crooks in an English town. Malc is in danger of losing his girlfriend Kate if he doesn't spend more time at home and the gang leader Jumbo looks like he is about to lose control.
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A brilliant short/medium film that shows what a brilliant writer/director can do with a good script, imagination, a few mates and some dodgy wigs. The future of British cinema is safe in his hands
It's a good feeling when you 'discover' a great film. Especially one that due to the nature of it's budget and distribution, only you and a handful of other lucky people will ever see. Those were my thoughts after watching 'Small Time'. Costing only a couple of grand to make, and filmed on the streets of Nottingham, it follows the daily ups and downs, mainly downs, of a group of friends scraping a day-by-day living by ducking and diving and stealing anything to hand. The story leads to a grand finale, but it's the interaction and the banter between the characters that makes this film such a fun ride, they are totally believeable. The cast are mainly unknowns, but thats what probably makes the chemistry work. The music is good as well, two accoustic guitar tunes near the middle of the film are fantastic, they sum up totally how the characters are really feeling. Buy it and cherish it, Hollywood can keep all it's 'eye candy', this is proper film making.
The little operation the leads in Shane Meadows' 1996 film Small Time head up is referred to by one of them as a "family business", but we're a long way from The Godfather territory here, as the crime ridden lives and antagonistic relations that are shared between those close to one another in and around a designated zone come to form the nucleus of a crime film you feel is about people whom might actually exist. Meadows' film is an ambitious piece, the debut film from someone whom has since gone on to produce far more accomplished work but here manages to etch out the best of an amateur cast asked to perform well above their capabilities whilst working within what appears to be the constraints of a minimal budget with which invention and a fair degree of style is implemented upon the piece. The film eventually comes to resemble something more interesting as a retrospective piece; the witnessing of a film-maker planting the foundations of a career in a film you wouldn't even be watching had you not already been aware of him.
Small Time somewhat successfully balances the elements of comedy, crime and genre non-specific character based realism; the film is relatively funny in rather-a blackish manner, the essence of the Dogma movement certainly prominent at certain times with the sense of a man feeling his way into feature film-making simultaneously subscribing to a kitchen-sink approach additionally feeling prominent. Its primary interest is to tell a tale about a handful of lowlifes just living in England; living in their houses, with the friends and lovers in and around, doing what they do. The film's branching off into causality driven territory within the crime genre when the robbing of an establishment becomes the focus is a jump Meadows doesn't quite manage as effectively as he would later come to do so in something like 2006's This is England; a film portraying a hostile and pent-up world from the perspective of a grieving youngster whom becomes more deeply involved with a gang of youths. The trick there seeing Meadows paint the initial exchanges with those in the gang as carefree and fun, the lead developed friends and began to enjoy life again before a distinct turn into a more bleaker realm reared its head.
The clan are made up of a group of people in their late twenties, early thirties; the primary two of whom are Malc, played by once-Meadows regular Mat Hand and Jumbo, who's played by Meadows himself. At home, their women banter with one another and suffer from frustrations born out of the relationships they have with their neighbours and the volatile relationship Ruby (Kawecka) has with Jumbo. The Nottingham based crew are not the brightest nor the sharpest, the kinds of people whom go out of their way to carefully calculate the stealing of a load of dog-food from the rear of a store before making it all the way to the getaway vehicle only to begin arguing in the middle of the street over how old you need to be to obtain an HGV licence. In their own words, and echoing what a certain infamous individual from the very city in which they're based lived by, they "rob from the rich and give to the poor" so as to get by. In truth, they rob from the poor only to provide to the poorer, that is to say, themselves; a crafty little scheme cooked up at a car-boot sale of all places sees them put their plans into action as an array of items are stolen from a table as another member distracts the retailer, thus illustrating the sort of life they lead so as to get by.
The characters are, as the title suggests, small time but they're wanting to move out into the big time. At the centre appears the question as to whether the men are willing to go down a crime fuelled path if it means loosing their women, those of whom want the opposite and wish to get out and away from everything they despise about where they are: their housing, the people around them and the sorts of lives they lead. On a wholly positive note, Kate and Ruby are refreshingly strong characters; Meadows granting them screen time and going on to some impressive lengths so as to deconstruct what it is they feel and think. One sequence sees Kate verbally highlight how disenchanted she is with being stuck in the two bedroom terrace in which they live and relegated to the kitchen, itself a representation of domesticisation, as her man Malc permits himself to go out and enjoy himself.
Where light comedy through dialogue and somewhat amusing altercations as the lads come to acquire goods and products generally dominate, that sense of it leading or building to something thoroughly worth demonising in armed robbery is prominent. As mentioned, Meadows doesn't quite nail the shifting nor the towing and froing in tone that he would later come to execute rather well, particularly in the aforementioned This is England as well as 2004's revenge thriller Dead Man's Shoes, which you distinctly felt shift right nearer the end. Regardless, you admire the ambition in the effort even if it is a little underwhelming but there are ideas and specific approaches to specific material that's worth checking out and placing in context thus culminating in a just-about worthwhile film watching experience.
Small Time somewhat successfully balances the elements of comedy, crime and genre non-specific character based realism; the film is relatively funny in rather-a blackish manner, the essence of the Dogma movement certainly prominent at certain times with the sense of a man feeling his way into feature film-making simultaneously subscribing to a kitchen-sink approach additionally feeling prominent. Its primary interest is to tell a tale about a handful of lowlifes just living in England; living in their houses, with the friends and lovers in and around, doing what they do. The film's branching off into causality driven territory within the crime genre when the robbing of an establishment becomes the focus is a jump Meadows doesn't quite manage as effectively as he would later come to do so in something like 2006's This is England; a film portraying a hostile and pent-up world from the perspective of a grieving youngster whom becomes more deeply involved with a gang of youths. The trick there seeing Meadows paint the initial exchanges with those in the gang as carefree and fun, the lead developed friends and began to enjoy life again before a distinct turn into a more bleaker realm reared its head.
The clan are made up of a group of people in their late twenties, early thirties; the primary two of whom are Malc, played by once-Meadows regular Mat Hand and Jumbo, who's played by Meadows himself. At home, their women banter with one another and suffer from frustrations born out of the relationships they have with their neighbours and the volatile relationship Ruby (Kawecka) has with Jumbo. The Nottingham based crew are not the brightest nor the sharpest, the kinds of people whom go out of their way to carefully calculate the stealing of a load of dog-food from the rear of a store before making it all the way to the getaway vehicle only to begin arguing in the middle of the street over how old you need to be to obtain an HGV licence. In their own words, and echoing what a certain infamous individual from the very city in which they're based lived by, they "rob from the rich and give to the poor" so as to get by. In truth, they rob from the poor only to provide to the poorer, that is to say, themselves; a crafty little scheme cooked up at a car-boot sale of all places sees them put their plans into action as an array of items are stolen from a table as another member distracts the retailer, thus illustrating the sort of life they lead so as to get by.
The characters are, as the title suggests, small time but they're wanting to move out into the big time. At the centre appears the question as to whether the men are willing to go down a crime fuelled path if it means loosing their women, those of whom want the opposite and wish to get out and away from everything they despise about where they are: their housing, the people around them and the sorts of lives they lead. On a wholly positive note, Kate and Ruby are refreshingly strong characters; Meadows granting them screen time and going on to some impressive lengths so as to deconstruct what it is they feel and think. One sequence sees Kate verbally highlight how disenchanted she is with being stuck in the two bedroom terrace in which they live and relegated to the kitchen, itself a representation of domesticisation, as her man Malc permits himself to go out and enjoy himself.
Where light comedy through dialogue and somewhat amusing altercations as the lads come to acquire goods and products generally dominate, that sense of it leading or building to something thoroughly worth demonising in armed robbery is prominent. As mentioned, Meadows doesn't quite nail the shifting nor the towing and froing in tone that he would later come to execute rather well, particularly in the aforementioned This is England as well as 2004's revenge thriller Dead Man's Shoes, which you distinctly felt shift right nearer the end. Regardless, you admire the ambition in the effort even if it is a little underwhelming but there are ideas and specific approaches to specific material that's worth checking out and placing in context thus culminating in a just-about worthwhile film watching experience.
The other reviews amaze me. Didn't they see the terrible wigs and hammy local college of performing arts acting. The characters appear to have been purchased as a past-their use-by date job lot from Stereotypes-R-Us. Harry Enfields scouser family, appearing on TV around the time this was made, are actually MORE believable as real people. This is partly due to the hideous legacy that is British DRAMA ACTING. From the days of Laurence Olivier right through to the BBC dramas of today there is the received wisdom of the correct way to act. The acting in this film is like watching performing arts students having their first go at trying on wigs and costumes in order to portray the poor but resilient folk of the forgotten council estate. It would appear that the script, too, was written by the council. Maybe the whole film was a council film. It certainly looked and felt like it. Like others, I enjoyed This Is England, which is the nearest Meadows has got to being a shadow of Ken Loach, and Dead Man's Shoes had some good moments (but a stupid ending). However, this, admittedly early, effort is poor and doesn't deserve the good reviews given by the few people who were brave enough to sit through the whole thing. This is not the worst ever use of a BFI grant but it is among the worst portrayals of life on a council estate that relies heavily on wigs and stereotypes.
i watched this film at college and at the time i had never heard of shane meadows. since i watched this film i have become a huge fan of all his films. this man is the future of british cinema and is what the industry has needed. the film itself is very realistic in parts and is cast very well too. the script is brilliant and i found it inspirational as a way to write down to earth comedies with drama added on to it. hopefully this film is the way that meadows wants to go on and it seems that it will be from films such as room for romeo brass and 24/7.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesDirectorial debut of Shane Meadows.
- PatzerWhen Lenny does the deal with the cook the box is obviously empty.
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Details
Box Office
- Budget
- 8.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std.(60 min)
- Farbe
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