Joseph, geplagt von Gewalt und enormer Wut, die ihn bis zur Selbstzerstörung treibt, bekommt eine Chance auf Erlösung in Form von Hannah, Verkäuferin in einem Wohltätigkeitsladen.Joseph, geplagt von Gewalt und enormer Wut, die ihn bis zur Selbstzerstörung treibt, bekommt eine Chance auf Erlösung in Form von Hannah, Verkäuferin in einem Wohltätigkeitsladen.Joseph, geplagt von Gewalt und enormer Wut, die ihn bis zur Selbstzerstörung treibt, bekommt eine Chance auf Erlösung in Form von Hannah, Verkäuferin in einem Wohltätigkeitsladen.
- 1 BAFTA Award gewonnen
- 24 Gewinne & 25 Nominierungen insgesamt
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This is a grim film. Grim in every way but where there is despair there is always a chink of light and Tyrannosaur is all about that little chink of light.
Joseph is an angry man . A very angry man. A man who's life is not good. When he's life is at it's worst he accidentally comes across a good Samaritan in Hannah who see's the good in people yet in reality is having a far worse time than Joseph.
I have to say that the performance of Olivia Colman has to be the best i have seen by any actor this year. A quite stunning portrayal of a battered woman who has nothing good in her life yet always has a smile for someone. Peter Mullan is fantastic also and it goes without saying that Eddie Marsden is brilliant.
Writer and director Paddy Constantine should be proud of what he has done here and i cant recommend this film highly enough and if this does not pick up awards in the new year then there is no justice.
Joseph is a rage filled alcoholic who is mad at the world and living alone after the death of his wife years earlier. He meets Hannah, a woman running a consignment shop; she prays for him even though he doesn't believe in God. Her husband is an abusive controlling monster. This is not a happily after story and it feels very realistic, portraying everyday working class people struggling with loneliness, regret and doubt. Mullan and Colman radiate genuine human emotion, never looking like Hollywood,s usual pretty faces. This is worthwhile just for the two leads who are riveting.
Just be aware that this film will not leave you feeling good about life in general.
But writer/director Paddy Considine brings his own stamp to this project in his bold portrayal of an odd couple fleetingly driven together in extreme circumstances. Joseph is a self-loathing, hard-drinking loner, haunted by past failures, particularly in regard to his wife, whom he hit. He tries to make up for his character failings with displays of loyalty to a dying friend. It smacks of too little too late.
Hannah is a devout Christian who works in a Charity Shop during the day, and enjoys a large glass of rioja at night. Her faith is built on less stable foundations than Joseph assumes when they first meet. His attack on her character may well prove to be the last abusive act of his life, such is the scale of regret it will bring in the long-term.
Peter Mullan as Joseph is convincingly lost, playing a character removed by only a few degrees from the father he portrays in Neds. Olivia Colman is simply immense as Hannah, a brittle front easily broached by Joseph's bile, unleashing a fear and unhinged reaction that even the volatile Joseph struggles to comprehend. In between there is a touching vulnerability and unnerving humanity. Eddie Marsan, as the depraved James, once again proves why he is fast becoming Britain's preeminent character actor.
This is character-driven social realist film-making to a certain extent, though there is a prominent three-act structure, exhibited more than in most films of the type, including a quite shocking but satisfying 'surprise' at the end. Tyrannosaur forces you to think about how we treat each other, and about the lives unraveling around us that we choose to turn a blind eye to. A mature debut from Considine, who sets a very high bar for himself.
Mr. Considine is able to realise, thanks to a perfect script and superb actors, a small masterpiece and a perfect debut.
The story set in a Leeds of charity shops and pubs, tells the anger, frustration, domestic violence, so common in this early-century England.
Over time we learn that the request for aid between the main characters becomes mutual, up to a finale as unexpected as disturbing.
Well done to everyone, but honour to Peter Mullan about holding the entire film with a surprising force and fragility.
Highly recommended.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesIn the early bar scene where Joseph is sitting alone talking to himself, the voice off screen saying, "Are you all right, Joseph?" belongs to director Paddy Considine, who said he was so taken in by Peter Mullan's performance that the question was totally spontaneous.
- PatzerThe dog would have been destroyed after attacking the child.
- Zitate
Hannah: Why Tyrannosaur?
Joseph: What?
Hannah: You said something about your wife Tyrannosaurus or something?
Joseph: What's Tyrannosaurus about? Yeah
[nods head]
Joseph: It was a joke name... In Jurassic Park you know the movie, there's a scene where the kids are scared, they're looking out the glass and they hear the Tyrannosaur coming. As it thumps its way towards them
[thump, thump, thump]
Joseph: the glass starts to ripple... So
[sighs]
Joseph: my wife was a big lady, and you'd hear her going up the stairs and it was like
[thump, thump, thump]
Joseph: I swear if I had a cup of tea on the sideboard you'd see the same ripples in my tea. So I called her the Tyrannosaur.
[bows head and looks away]
Joseph: I was being a cunt.
- Crazy CreditsPreceding the end credits is the note: For Pauline
- VerbindungenFeatured in Ebert Presents: At the Movies: Folge #2.19 (2011)
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
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- Auch bekannt als
- Tyrannosaur
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Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 22.321 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 7.635 $
- 20. Nov. 2011
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 676.111 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 32 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1