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Rocks

  • 2019
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
5.8K
YOUR RATING
Rocks (2019)
The film follows teenager Rocks (Bukky Bakray) who fears that she and her little brother Emmanuel (D’angelou Osei Kissiedu) will be forced apart if anyone finds out they are living alone. With the help of her friends, she evades the authorities and navigates the most defining days of her life. ROCKS is a film about the joy, resilience and spirit of girlhood.
Play trailer1:47
1 Video
17 Photos
Coming-of-AgeTeen DramaDrama

A young teenage girl finds herself struggling to take care of herself and her younger brother after being abandoned by their single mother with no choice but to live out on the streets.A young teenage girl finds herself struggling to take care of herself and her younger brother after being abandoned by their single mother with no choice but to live out on the streets.A young teenage girl finds herself struggling to take care of herself and her younger brother after being abandoned by their single mother with no choice but to live out on the streets.

  • Director
    • Sarah Gavron
  • Writers
    • Theresa Ikoko
    • Claire Wilson
  • Stars
    • Bukky Bakray
    • Kosar Ali
    • D'angelou Osei Kissiedu
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    5.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sarah Gavron
    • Writers
      • Theresa Ikoko
      • Claire Wilson
    • Stars
      • Bukky Bakray
      • Kosar Ali
      • D'angelou Osei Kissiedu
    • 42User reviews
    • 45Critic reviews
    • 95Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 BAFTA Award
      • 16 wins & 30 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:47
    Official Trailer

    Photos16

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    Top cast60

    Edit
    Bukky Bakray
    Bukky Bakray
    • Shola 'Rocks' Omotoso
    Kosar Ali
    Kosar Ali
    • Sumaya
    D'angelou Osei Kissiedu
    • Emmanuel Omotoso
    Shaneigha-Monik Greyson
    • Roshé
    Ruby Stokes
    Ruby Stokes
    • Agnes
    Tawheda Begum
    • Khadijah
    Afi Okaidja
    • Yawa
    Anastasia Dymitrow
    • Sabina
    Sarah Niles
    Sarah Niles
    • Ms. Booker
    Layo-Christina Akinlude
    Layo-Christina Akinlude
    • Funke Omotoso
    Sharon D. Clarke
    Sharon D. Clarke
    • Anita
    • (as Sharon Clarke)
    Shola Adewusi
    Shola Adewusi
    • Grandmother Omotoso
    • (voice)
    Mohammad Amiri
    • Mohammed
    Brie-Morgan Appleton
    • Natasha
    Joshua Avory
    • Mr. See
    Ashley Merino Bastidas
    • Micaela
    Nadya Bettioui
    • Ms. Hassan
    Joanna Brookes
    • Geraldine
    • Director
      • Sarah Gavron
    • Writers
      • Theresa Ikoko
      • Claire Wilson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews42

    7.45.7K
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    Featured reviews

    9srjohannes

    Powerful

    Rocks is a film that was really powerful. It was heartfelt, touching, and emotional. You were able to get wrapped up into the story and experience something that felt real. You were able to cringe at the lows the main character reaches, you were able to smile at small character moments, and you were able to cry when things turned somber. This film is wonderfully crafted, with its excellent writing, editing, direction, and story, it's truly remarkable. I have nothing but good things to say. I rate Rocks a 9/10.
    8kevin c

    (true) girl power

    Movie night with Iris.

    Despite the terrible circumstances upbeat tale of a steady and immutable young woman. This is the most authentic film about British teens in years.

    The events of Rocks are tragic, but the film (like its heroine) refuses to get dragged down by despair. Rocks is a heartfelt testament to the resilience of our young sisterhood.
    7rubenm

    Portrait d'une jeune fille en difficulté

    At the beginning of 'Rocks', the audience sees the images in a vertical rectangular frame, as if they were filmed with a smartphone. For a second, I feared this was going to be the case during the whole film. Fortunately, it is a gimmick that's repeated only now and then for a few seconds. In fact, it is quite a nice and appropriate feature, because the film is about teenage girls. As teenage girls do, they film each other with their smartphones. The images add to the authenticity of this film, which does a very good job by showing the girls' lives as real as can be. Rocks, as everyone calls her, is a normal and happy girl, living in a multicultural working class part of London. But her life is turned upside down when one day her mother dissapears, leaving only a note and some money, telling Rocks she 'needs time to clear her head'. From then on, Rocks has to take care of herself and her little brother. She doesn't tell anyone about her mother's dissapearance, fearing the authorities, but her situation gets more and more difficult. The young actresses are phenomenal. This is as close as you can get to a fly-on-the-wall account of modern teenage life. During the film, friendships develop, as well as mutual aversions. Rocks tests the loyalty of her friends to the limit. Apart from being a portrait of a young girl in difficult circumstances, it is also a tribute to female power and loyalty. Apart from Rocks's little brother and some school teachers, there are almost no male characters in the film. At times, the film reminded me of 'Entre les murs', the French movie about a difficult school class. At other times, it reminded me of 'Nobody knows', the Japanese movie of children left behind by their mother. Anyone who enjoyed these films, wil enjoy this one too.
    8amandeepsinghmehmi

    ROCKS. Heart-breaking & Energetic

    ROCKS.

    This film directed by Sarah Gavron realistically captures a completely different London to which you usually see. A youthful London, not seen through the lens of gang violence, or an other-worldly bright posh feel, but one simply about sisterhood.

    Girlhood is a good film to compare it to, or Divines, but this feels wholly new. The gritty feel to London is captured viscerally and it's nice seeing different characters which are not usually represented on screen.

    The director feels removed in the best way, but the vision always felt tightly held. The performances feel like real people with their improv-type dialogue.

    You can sense the collaboration and the naturalism bleeds through easily, due to the workshops the actors had partaken in beforehand, making for the hang out moment's and atmosphere feel effortlessly lived in.

    The performances were great due to an impressive ensemble and there was an authenticity not just from the main youthful cast, but all the outsiders 'Rocks' encounters in her story.

    Bukky Bakray's central performance as 'Rocks' is simply extremely powerful. She does a great job of showing her emotional frailties' as well as transitioning into a sense of maturity by placing it onto her little brother played by D'angelou Osei Kissiedu, who does a terrific job, portraying innocence and flair as well as being comic relief straight from the beginning.

    Rocks' hardened experience and the unfair burden placed on her leads to a harrowing innocence to experience by her mother disappearing, which is not explicitly justified in the beginning as to why, perhaps to show it from Rock's oblivious, innocent perspective.

    Also, an underrated aspect is this film handles the contemporary age of phones and social media everywhere well and incorporate it into the visual storytelling.

    Many directors feel they have to make period pieces as they have stated they don't know how to get past the smartphone barrier, and Rocks has arguably overcome this successfully.

    However, this can cause abrupt edits and loses the fluidity and pacing of some scenes.

    It can also lead to a contrast when deciding if it is a exciting scene as opposed to the more somber, contemplative, realistic feel the film is aiming to capture and balance, but I applaud the effort.

    The tone is also all over the place, conceivably representing her life and predicament, however there may be too much tether given.

    The cinematography by Hélène Louvart, who also shot Never Rarely Sometimes Always recently, places us into Rocks perspective with ease and is extremely detailed whilst creating an intimate drama in which Rocks is almost in every frame.

    The film is written by Nigerian-British playwright/screenwriter Theresa Ikoko along with film and TV writer Claire Wilson in which they combine tragedy and humour with a thread of looseness which is inevitably down to the collaboration and preparation of this film.

    The ending for some feels incomplete for some, but without spoiling anything, there was definitely a realisation and conclusion to this intense story - a minor key ending.

    Overall Gavron, and her predominantly female crew, have made a film with its heart in the right place and it will surely be one of the best films this year. Vital cinema.
    8tm-sheehan

    or "The Kids Aren't Alright " BAFTA favourite

    My Review- Rocks The most nominated movie at the BAFTAS this year with 7 nominations in all. My Rating 7.5 :10 I won't mention the major films that have been snubbed at the new look Politically correct BAFTAS this year except to say that this Independent "Indie" film "Rocks" budget wouldn't even have paid for the catering van on a Blockbuster or mainstream Studio movie The director, of "Rocks"Sarah Gavron's last film, 2015's Suffragette, featured a star-studded cast and reasonably-sized budget. "Rocks" . Sarah Gavron spent a couple of years securing funding, Gavron and her producer Faye Ward eventually secured £3 million - This is a heartfelt contemporary story it could have been alternately titled "The Kids Aren't Alright." Shola (Bukky Bakray), or Rocks, as she's known, lives in a London council flat with her younger brother Emmanuel (D'angelou Osei Kissiedu) and their single mother. Bukky Bakray is nominated for a Best Actress BAFTA and she is wonderful in her role as Emmanuel's protector after her mentally stressed Mum leaves a note to say she has to leave them to "fix her head" Rocks comes home to find her life radically altered: she is suddenly on her own with a child to take care of. Rocks is mercurial, impulsive, and deeply sensitive - not unusual for her age, she sometimes makes desperately poor decisions, for what look to her like good reasons. This leads to misunderstandings with her best friend Sumatra played beautifully by Kosar Ali (nominated for Best Supporting Actress BAFTA ) and basically taking to the streets with brother Emmanuel . I'm amazed that D'angelou Osie Kidsedou didn't get a nomination for Best Supporting Actor he really gives a splendid performance. The film premiered at the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival in the Platform Prize program and hasn't really been noticed by any of the major Awards up till this years BAFTAS and I predict in the BAFTAS new Culturally diverse culture that "Rocks" will Rock at this year's Ceremony.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Included among the "1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die", edited by Steven Schneider.
    • Connections
      Features Buy Buy Baby (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Proud Mary
      Written by John Fogerty (as John Cameron Fogerty)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Rocks?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 9, 2020 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Рокс
    • Filming locations
      • Hackney, London, England, UK(neighborhood where Rocks lives)
    • Production companies
      • Fable Pictures
      • British Film Institute (BFI) Production Board
      • Film4
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $628,654
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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