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Somers Town

  • 2008
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 11m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
6.9K
YOUR RATING
Thomas Turgoose and Piotr Jagiello in Somers Town (2008)
A black-and-white study of a social environment in London, concentrating on a pair of unlikely new friends and the girl they both fancy.
Play trailer2:03
1 Video
59 Photos
ComedyDrama

A black-and-white study of a social environment in London, concentrating on a pair of unlikely new friends and the girl they both fancy.A black-and-white study of a social environment in London, concentrating on a pair of unlikely new friends and the girl they both fancy.A black-and-white study of a social environment in London, concentrating on a pair of unlikely new friends and the girl they both fancy.

  • Director
    • Shane Meadows
  • Writers
    • Paul Fraser
    • Mother Vision
  • Stars
    • Piotr Jagiello
    • Ireneusz Czop
    • Perry Benson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    6.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Shane Meadows
    • Writers
      • Paul Fraser
      • Mother Vision
    • Stars
      • Piotr Jagiello
      • Ireneusz Czop
      • Perry Benson
    • 34User reviews
    • 49Critic reviews
    • 77Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

    Somers Town
    Trailer 2:03
    Somers Town

    Photos58

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    Top cast24

    Edit
    Piotr Jagiello
    Piotr Jagiello
    • Marek
    Ireneusz Czop
    Ireneusz Czop
    • Mariusz
    Perry Benson
    • Graham
    Thomas Turgoose
    Thomas Turgoose
    • Tomo
    Kate Dickie
    Kate Dickie
    • Jane
    Wojciech Olczak
    • Polish Friend
    Wojtek Macierznski
    • Polish Friend
    Ben Porter
    Ben Porter
    • Office Worker
    Jamie Belman
    • Office Worker
    Steven Hillman
    Steven Hillman
    • Construction Worker
    • (as Steve Hillman)
    Mark Monero
    Mark Monero
    • Construction Worker
    Ryan Ford
    • Local Kid
    Levi Hayes
    • Local Kid
    Risade Campbell
    • Local Kid
    • (as Risadé Campbell)
    Huggy Leaver
    • Café Owner
    Trevor Cooper
    Trevor Cooper
    • Angry Resident
    Elisa Lasowski
    Elisa Lasowski
    • Maria
    Eddy Hasson
    • French Man in Café
    • Director
      • Shane Meadows
    • Writers
      • Paul Fraser
      • Mother Vision
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews34

    6.86.8K
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    Featured reviews

    9blackburnj-1

    A wonderful snapshot to fall in love with

    Shane Meadows' beautiful snapshot of life for two teenagers in North London, "Somers Town", is a million miles away from "This is England" in tone, but has no less class or brilliance about it. Filmed in wonderful black and white, this is a delightful, entertaining and involving piece about youth, culture and friendship.

    The power of Meadows's film-making is in his characters. Something rings fundamentally true about the people that he brings to the screen, and the writing of Paul Fraser (a long time Meadows-collaborator) is a great help to this film. The dialogue is humorous, moving and insightful, which gets the audience utterly involved in this film. Added to this, the acting is wonderful. Thomas Turgoose, who was spectacular in "This is England", continues to be an impressive and interesting screen presence. He is ably supported, not just by Piotr Jagiello, who plays the Polish teenager Marek, but by the rest of the small, but perfectly formed, ensemble.

    This film is not just an entertaining and moving piece, but is also a beautiful film with a dash of severity. There is a particularly emotive and thought-provoking scene where the immigrant father and son talk to each other. Britain's debates on immigration often ignore the individuals involved in the issues, and that scene cuts right to an unexplored area of the matter.

    The beauty of the film is not just in its emotions and characters, but also in its photography. Monochrome is a form of cinematography which lends itself to beauty, but Meadows exploits this magnificently. There is a change to colour during the film which could have been crass but is in fact wonderful. The images are also accompanied by a beautiful series of songs which give the film real character. All of these elements come to fore in a number of dialogue-less sequences.

    Meadows has created a lovely piece of cinema. Short though it is, that is part of its charm. It is not extraneous or self-indulgent. It is what it is: a simple joy to be delighted in by many.
    bob the moo

    Not the brilliant piece some would have you believe but a perfectly fine little film with a simple agenda

    The English press have perhaps been a bit too kind to this film because I came to it with lots of glowing and very positive reviews in my ears. This is understandable given the way it was made and, more importantly, that it was made by British director Shane Meadows, in yet another different entry in his resume. Following the success of This is England, Meadows has come south for a small story about a minor friendship between two young men who finds themselves in need of one another to some extent. Tomo has left Nottingham and found himself with nowhere to go in London and is robbed his first night in town. Marek is an immigrant who lives in a basic flat with his father but spends the majority of his time alone. The two meet in a café where Marek is fixated on the pretty French waitress and, after initial conflict, a uneasy friendship develops.

    The film is comparatively quite short but accordingly it is also a very slight affair, with a very basic plot in place that is secondary to the general air of the film and the exploration of the world they find themselves in. I can understand why this would put many off because for the majority of the film (if not all the film) it can feel like "nothing" is happening – mainly because it isn't. The film relies a lot on the feel of it and our interest in the two boys and I think it almost relies on this too much without giving us a lot of reason to care narrative-wise. That said though, the easy chemistry that develops between the two boys is quite affecting and their relative naivety and desire for a woman out of their reach does ring true as part of a growing up process. The fact that the bigger picture of these two lives is largely left in the background is a bit of a problem but then it is hard to see how all that could have been brought in with the budget and time constraints.

    Meadows directs the film well though and should be commended for staying in smaller British films that he wants to make. The hand-held style here takes a minute to get used to but with his camera and his script he is kind to the characters – not blind to who they are but not judgemental visually or thematically. He gets very good performances as well. Turgoose doesn't quite impress as he did when he had stronger material but his is still an affecting turn. Better though is Jagiello, who is wonderfully shy and interesting as a delivered character. Lasowski may have a tiny part but her light, Gaelic sexiness is perfect for the type of character she has to play within the film. Czop is convincing and I also enjoyed Benson's small-time wheeler/dealer.

    Overall Somers Town is not that great a film and it will not show up amongst the best works from Meadows but it is not without its appeal. The plot is simple and doesn't go anywhere or real import but the film works in the realism and warmth of the two main characters and their small interactions. Not as brilliant as some would have you believe but a perfectly fine little film with a simple agenda.
    8cudas

    for my money, better than 'This is England'

    Though clearly a bit of a "quickie" project made in the immediate afterglow of This Is England - and featuring that film's young star Thomas Turgoose in one of the two main roles - the DV-shot, (mainly) black-and-white, minimal-budgeted 'Somers Town' is by no means a "minor" Meadows. Indeed, in terms of tonal consistency, concision and cumulative emotional wallop, it's in several ways a more satisfying enterprise than its bigger, BAFTA-winning "brother". Indeed (again), there have been very few more moving films from any director since Meadows' own Dead Man's Shoes (2004) - though in this instance it's very much a case of joyful rather than sorrowful tears. This is a delightful, quietly topical, deceptively slight miniature about teenage friendship and first love - scarcely new subjects for cinema, but handled with sufficient sensitivity, humour and spirit to emphatically justify such a choice of material. Meadows and his scriptwriter Paul Fraser, meanwhile, deserve particular credit for so deftly maintaining such a delicate balance between the bouncily engaging story and its sad, even tragic subtexts.
    8Psychojon

    Cute? Hardly - A Powerful Commentary on Contemporary England

    Others have written that this film is a cute coming-of-age platonic love story. Well, that's one way of viewing the film. Another more direct reading is to look at the relationships between the white English and the immigrants (Polish and French). Both sets of people are portrayed somewhat stereotypically. The white English are Del Boy wideboys, lazy, rude, chavlike, selfish, self-centred, always on the scrounge, moaning, violent, loutish and drunk. The immigrants are decent hard-working people with a moral compass, who know what's right and what's wrong. Despite these stereotypical characters, this is an amazingly powerful film.

    I'm a white middle-class English man and I've spent a lot of my life living in inner cities (London, Manchester, Birmingham, Wolverhampton and Milton Keynes). You know what? - these stereotypes rang (frighteningly) true to me. The film captured many of my frustrations with the way that the English national culture has changed; less tolerant, less considerate, less welcoming, more something-for-nothing. This is England today. The film made me feel ashamed of what we have become.

    I left the cinema saddened; thinking that England could once again become a great country to live in if only we could remove all the bloody English.
    Otoboke

    Too much of too little

    Somers Town is a typical example of an indie film made for the sake of being indie; it's distilled, slow moving and at times poignantly moving in as much of an anti-melodramatic manner as possible, yet it's also blatantly empty, pointless and more often than not, unremarkable. Coming off of his critically acclaimed This Is England, director Shane Meadows here crafts a mostly pedestrian feature that doesn't quite understand the distinction between meditative and sleepy. Sure enough it can be an amusing seventy minutes, with some nice scenes between two very capable actors who play natural characters, but as a whole, these sets of ideas never really mesh into one coherent piece of work. Being more likely to induce drowsiness rather than enlightenment, Somers Town, much like it's closing sequence, is like watching someone's holiday photos as they prattle on about their mundane day over each slide; at times there will be something interesting to be heard, but it just never seems to justify taking the time to do so. This is a shame because deep within the movie, there is definite heart and some strong themes, yet smothered by countless scenes of uninteresting, minute details, this follow up to Meadows' previous success feels more like a forgettable intermission rather than a whole, solid production.

    Set in modern day London, around the construction of the Channel train system, Somers Town tells the tale of two teenage boys as they slowly find their way into their new and unfamiliar setting. Tomo (Thomas Turgoose) is from the East-Midlands of England, and having "nothing" back home (this is all that is revealed) has ventured to London to try and make something of himself; he doesn't know what he's going to do, but it seems he doesn't have much choice either way. Marek (Piotr Jagiello) is from Poland, having moved with his father to England after his parents break-up back home. Eventually both characters meet, and through their mutual alienation of being away from home and having nothing to do, they form a friendship. What follows from here is a whimsy, but deeply grounded tale that attempts to document the coming of age of two young lads as they come to terms with their new surroundings, and their new partnership. It can be sweet and fun to watch as the boys run mischief and share their conflicting ideas on topics such as food and women, yet much of this is saved for the remaining second half of the feature. The first half is notably dim, and although has its moments, feels more like an overlong introduction.

    Shot in monochrome, the film takes on a style that is reminiscent of this year's In Search of a Midnight Kiss in its romanticism of an otherwise dreary, worn down city. This side of London isn't pretty, as Tomo finds out early on when he's brutally mugged, and so the photography does well to echo the film's more ambitious, arty nuances used to portray the gritty, down to earth side of the story. One thing that it complements really well however, and not to positive effect, is the film's minimalist nature; the black and white does well to bring to the life the film's greatest, most poignant sequences, yet the filling between these areas becomes a lot less interesting to watch as a result. This was a problem in the aforementioned film also, but being that Somers Town is dramatically shorter winded, the less successful moments don't hinder the film's romanticism of realism to irreversible effect. The soundtrack is just as bare, and features the rather worn-out acoustic, indie compositions that fit the tone of the film well, but never go anywhere or do anything remarkable; it's developed at a suitable pace, yet the score itself is too timid and dry to warrant much attention outside of its cliché appearance.

    The primary intention that writer Paul Fraser here seems to striving for is simply to make us laugh, and such he does, but not very often. In fact he does a whole lot more than strike a chuckle or two; he crafts realistic, three-dimensional characters, he uses natural dialogue and mundane chatter to occupy his story, but such is where these small indulgences in practising the mundane becomes mundane in themselves. To be able to write everyday life, one can certainly involve realistic banter, dry themes and an almost nonexistent, nonlinear storyline, but when such is translated onto the big screen, it looses its relevancy. Somers Town certainly has integrity, and it has genuine heart, but in the end its pedestrian approach simply becomes too much of too little to achieve what it is obviously setting out to do. The actors do a strong job with the script and meadows certainly manages to get more than a few compelling scenes out of all involved, but the overwhelming feeling by the end is one of disquieted indifference; there's no denying that these seventy minutes feature some fine moments, but such indulgences could probably have been better suited to a short film format. It's a decently short affair for those who can appreciate dry-bones, hyper-realism cinema, but for anyone looking for anything profound or entertaining, you should probably stay away from Somers Town less you be mugged of your consciousness.

    • A review by Jamie Robert Ward. For more reviews of all the latest movies please visit: http://www.invocus.net

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      When Maria is speaking to the French man in the café where she works, the man is in fact talking about his digestion problems.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Diminishing Returns Diminisodes: Sol's Lists #1: The 100 Greatest Averaged Directorial Filmographies (2020)
    • Soundtracks
      Jerk It
      Written by Sid Barnes, Randall Stewart and J.J. Jackson

      Performed by The Gypsies

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Somers Town?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 29, 2009 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Polish
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Сомерстаун
    • Filming locations
      • Champ de Mars, Paris 7, Paris, France(The End in Paris)
    • Production companies
      • Big Arty Productions
      • Mother Vision
      • Tomboy Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • £500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,189,186
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 11m(71 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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