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IMDbPro

Small Faces

  • 1995
  • 16
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
Steven Duffy, Joe McFadden, and Iain Robertson in Small Faces (1995)
Home Video Trailer from October Films
Play trailer1:33
1 Video
21 Photos
Drama

Glaswegian teenager Lex is torn between the artistic life of middle brother Alan and the thuggish world of elder brother Bobby.Glaswegian teenager Lex is torn between the artistic life of middle brother Alan and the thuggish world of elder brother Bobby.Glaswegian teenager Lex is torn between the artistic life of middle brother Alan and the thuggish world of elder brother Bobby.

  • Director
    • Gillies MacKinnon
  • Writers
    • Billy MacKinnon
    • Gillies MacKinnon
  • Stars
    • Iain Robertson
    • Joe McFadden
    • Steven Duffy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    1.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gillies MacKinnon
    • Writers
      • Billy MacKinnon
      • Gillies MacKinnon
    • Stars
      • Iain Robertson
      • Joe McFadden
      • Steven Duffy
    • 20User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Small Faces
    Trailer 1:33
    Small Faces

    Photos21

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Iain Robertson
    • Lex Maclean
    Joe McFadden
    • Alan Maclean
    • (as Joseph McFadden)
    Steven Duffy
    • Bobby Maclean
    • (as J.S. Duffy)
    Laura Fraser
    Laura Fraser
    • Joanne Macgowan
    Garry Sweeney
    Garry Sweeney
    • Charlie Sloan
    Clare Higgins
    Clare Higgins
    • Lorna Maclean
    Kevin McKidd
    Kevin McKidd
    • Malky Johnson
    Mark McConnochie
    • Gorbals
    Steven Singleton
    • Welch
    David Walker
    • Fabio
    Ian McElhinney
    Ian McElhinney
    • Uncle Andrew
    Paul Doonan
    • Jake
    Colin Semple
    • Dowd
    Colin McCredie
    Colin McCredie
    • Doug
    Debbie Welsh
    • Rebecca
    Eilidh McCormick
    • Alice
    Monica Brady
    • Aunt
    Elizabeth McGregor
    • Mrs. McGowan
    • Director
      • Gillies MacKinnon
    • Writers
      • Billy MacKinnon
      • Gillies MacKinnon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.81.6K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    8Quag7

    Quality.

    I caught this film late night on the Sundance channel. It is extraordinarily well done. It's good to see more and more cinema from the UK showing on cable here in the US.

    Small Faces doesn't insult your intelligence, and it doesn't have any affectations. Its setting in the 60s is almost incidental; as someone else mentioned, there's no attempt here to glorify or overstate the setting for stylistic reasons.

    And I must say, some of the camera-work is beautiful. One shot in particular stands out; Lex stands in a large vacant lot, puddles reflecting the sky, near the Tongs' apartment building. Something in this shot is alternately so deliberately composed for its "ugly beauty" and at the same time completely unpretentious and real and necessary. The kid who plays the lead, Iain Robertson, does an incredible job and seems almost an inorganic part of the urban wreckage around him.

    No clichés. No insult to your intelligence. Just a story, well told, superbly acted, and superbly shot. This film is a textbook on how to make a good drama. Just one of many superb films from the UK (another recent good one was The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner) that we've been deprived of over here until now.

    First rate.
    8Balthazar-5

    Little gem

    Life in the tough end of Glasgow in the late 1960s is delightfully and sometimes painfully presented here. This is clearly a work of well-observed autobiography by the Mackinnon family - Billy the writer/producer and Gillies the director.

    At the centre of the film is the Maclean family - widowed mother with sons Bobby (none too bright), Alan (budding artist in spite of being brought up in the tough end of Govan) and narrator Lex, only 13 and still not sure what life is all about. Iain Robertson's performance as Lex is so good that it is barely credible that he has not reappeared in anything more worthy of his acting talent.

    The film sets up a series of oppositions - gangs (Glens versus Tongs); romantic family life vs tough and unromantic street life; loyalty vs betrayal. Far from resulting in simplification, this actually makes the life of young Lex even more complex as he is, sequentially, drawn to each aspect of these opposing ideas.

    Director Gillies shows he knows how to film his environment and gives us telling and memorable images - such as a huge close-up of blood running down a plug-hole that looks like some work of abstract art.

    Nowhere near as clichéd as most coming-of-age movies, this is a joy for teenagers and adults alike.
    7shobill

    It rewards those who stay with it

    In late-1960s Glasgow, three teenage brothers from a fatherless home in a lower working class neighborhood struggle to survive among the chaos and violence that is part of their subculture. The oldest has serious mental problems and a learning disability associated with his acting out. The middle brother tries to steer clear of it all as he struggles to pursue his artistic talent. And the story is told from the viewpoint of Lex, the 13-year-old, whose childish delinquency becomes serious business when he is forced into adult situations. At the beginning I had difficulty with the heavy Scottish dialect and had some confusion of characters and events, but I was drawn in by the progression of events and the development of the characters. This is a poignant coming-of-age story that rewards us if we stay with it.
    9MOscarbradley

    One of the key Bristish films of the decade

    The gifted Scottish director Gillies MacKinnon made this wonderfully fresh film about growing up in Glasgow in the late sixties and which he co-wrote with his brother Billy. It has the same feel for time and place and what it's like to be a teenager in a slightly idealized, hyper-realist past but it's an altogether more kinetic work full of great visual flourishes.

    It centres on the three Maclean brothers, the deeply troubled, almost psychopathic Bobby who is a member of one of two rival gangs, (J S Duffy), Adam who is a talented artist hoping to go to Art School, (Joe McFadden) and the youngest Lex, who like Adam also has a talent for art but who also fosters some of Bobby's rebellious spirit (Iain Robertson). When Lex accidentally shoots a member of the rival gang in the eye, the boys find themselves caught up, in an almost surrealist fashion, in the conflict which turns very nasty indeed. MacKinnon may be dealing with such conventional issues as gang warfare but he treats the material in ways movies haven't done before. Adults, such as the boy's mother, (beautifully played by Clare Higgins), remain very much on the fringe.

    This is a violent, darkly funny but mostly tragic film and the performances from the mostly young cast are extraordinary, in particular from J S Duffy and Iain Robertson and from Garry Sweeney as the vicious leader of Bobby's gang. The film wasn't widely circulated or seen and consequently was not a commercial success yet it remains one of the key British films of the past 10 years.
    9paulgeaf

    GET THIS MOVIE!

    If you see this in the TV listings, local videoshop, wherever, Get It! You will not find a more accurate movie that conveys the state of Glaswegian upbringing as it was and still is today. The violence, the course language and the way the young 'gangs' live and breathe on machismo and fights. The film shows an artist boy who is somewhat out of place in the world he finds himself living in. With his rather maniacal brother Bobby who just loves to go and fight the 'TONGS'. There is a younger brother in this family who becomes more of a central character as the film progresses. I don't want to give the story away so I will just say, if you want a true drama with no frills, fluff or effects, violence shown as it is, brutal and frightening (although I dont mean to put you off as it is highly watchable and not TOO brutal) -the utter desperation that some people live in and not only when this film is set in but today too. I know, I have lived in a similiar world. Nothing has really changed. If you want to find out just what this is like..GET THIS MOVIE! If you are from Glasgow or most places in central scotland - GET THIS MOVIE! Thats all :)

    (Just GET THIS MOVIE..)

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The scene where Alan and Lex visits an arts chool to check out the girls is shot at "Glasgow School of Art", which is the masterpiece of designer Charles Rennie Mackintosh. It opened in 1899 when Mackintosh was only 28.
    • Quotes

      Lex Maclean: [about a sick-looking portrait by Bacon] It looks just like our Bobby after a bad night out!

    • Connections
      Edited into Screen Two: Small Faces (1998)
    • Soundtracks
      Auld Lang Syne
      Performed by Iain Robertson

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Small Faces?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 24, 1996 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Vidas enfrentadas
    • Filming locations
      • Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, UK
    • Production companies
      • BBC Film
      • Billy MacKinnon
      • Skyline Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $155,239
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $10,972
      • Aug 18, 1996
    • Gross worldwide
      • $155,239
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 48m(108 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby

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