NOTE IMDb
6,2/10
2,5 k
MA NOTE
Basé sur l'enfance du réalisateur, ce film raconte l'histoire d'un jeune garçon nigérian, « confié » par ses parents à une famille britannique blanche dans l'espoir d'un avenir meilleur. Il ... Tout lireBasé sur l'enfance du réalisateur, ce film raconte l'histoire d'un jeune garçon nigérian, « confié » par ses parents à une famille britannique blanche dans l'espoir d'un avenir meilleur. Il devient le chef redouté d'un gang de skinheads.Basé sur l'enfance du réalisateur, ce film raconte l'histoire d'un jeune garçon nigérian, « confié » par ses parents à une famille britannique blanche dans l'espoir d'un avenir meilleur. Il devient le chef redouté d'un gang de skinheads.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 3 victoires et 3 nominations au total
Avis à la une
This is a really disturbing story. I feel so sad for Enitan, I cannot possibly imagine what he went through in his childhood. His transformation is remarkable. In the final ending it reveals who Enitan is, and I'm shocked by the revelation. It brings the film to another level of emotional climax.
A story that needed to be told - moving!
A good interpretaion of a troubled UK - in troubled times - Good performance by Beckinsale - stole the show
In the early 1990s while dinning in an African restaurant in Los Angeles, I bumped into Adewale - he'd heard my English accent as I spoke with my West African wife and struck up a conversation. We exchanged numbers and agreed to meet up again having mentioned our mutual interest in the movie industry. He was just breaking into Hollywood and I fancied myself a screenwriter.
Adewale shared the phenomenon of 'farming the children,' recounting his own experiences under that abdication of parental responsibility. Since we're both Londoners of similar age we shared stories of our youth in the late seventies. I spent that period of my life deeply immersed in the British punk rock scene, itself a hub for the skinhead and mod revivals. I have no recollection of Adewale mentioning his peculiar involvement in a gang of ultra-violent white racist skinheads during this era; perhaps shame dictated he avoid speaking of such an astonishing episode in his life.What I do know is that his movie's portrayal of nineteen-seventies white working-class English people and of the subcultures of their children is absurdly cartoonish and trite.
The neo-Nazi, psycho-skin trope has been a reliable contemporary Hammer Horror-like monster which 'Farmed' disappointingly enjoins. It's unfortunate since this era's youth is redolent with story lines worth telling - and worth telling accurately. The working-class English who lived during that time are a kaleidoscope of characters and attitudes worthy of honest examination as are their interactions with immigrants and their English-born children. To portray them as generally bigoted, oafish, humourless and hyper-aggressive is to indulge a stereotype no less insulting than the black pimp or the inscrutable Asian.
Nigerian farmed children have unique and lamentable stories, but for me this film failed to capture the emotional complexity and profundity of the arrangement due to heavy-handed poetic license of the writer/director.
I was not aware of the "farming" practice... But i'm "happy" - kind of - to have discovered it with this movie. The only fact that it is based on the writer's life made it so strong and so, deep! I recommend this movie to anyone interested into this topic - or anyone who enjoy great movies! There is some images that really hit at the right place... Damson Idris is really something... His role must have been hard to do but he nailed it like... NAILED IT!... And what to say about Kate Beckinsale, simply stunning!!! Seriously, are you still reading ?.... Go watch this movie, and hit like NOW!
Suicide Squad's Adewale AkinnuoyeAgbaje turns writer/director to revisit his own youth in a striking if unsophisticated biopic. As a child, Enitan's Nigerian parents have him raised by a white family in '60s London - the 'farming' that the title refers to. As a teen (Damson Idris, compelling), Enitan falls in with a white-supremacist skinhead gang. Yes, really. The shocking true story is undeniably fascinating, but it's underserved by the somewhat unpolished filmmaking; at times the low budget feels all too apparent. Still, Idris shows true potential, and Kate Beckinsale plays pleasingly against type as Enitan's workingclass adoptive mum.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesShortly after the release of this film, the online blog 'Creases Like Knives' published an article and review of the film, heavily implying that writer/director Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje had fictionalized a great deal of what was supposed to be 'his' story. The 'Tilbury Skins' gang portrayed in this film were inaccurately depicted, and anybody from Akinnuoye-Agbaje's past has yet to come forward and confirm that he was in fact a member of the white skinhead gang (let alone being their leader). On the contrary, a few people who attended high school with Akinnuoye-Agbaje describe him as belonging more to the 'mod' crowd, who never associated with such gangs.
- GaffesMs. Dapo's phone number is eleven digits long and begins with 013. In the 1980s UK phone numbers were ten digits long and the only ones which began with 01 were London's which had the dialing code 010.
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- How long is Farming?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Воспитание
- Lieux de tournage
- Gillingham, Kent, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(jewellery shop)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 89 374 $US
- Durée1 heure 41 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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