FILM REVIEW: Ill Manors (18, 121 mins)

IT’s a hard knock life for six godforsaken denizens of London in the gritty directorial debut of Ben Drew, aka Plan B.

Purportedly based on real people and real events, Ill Manors pulls no punches in its depiction of the lengths some people will go to in order to survive on the streets of the capital.

It’s a visually arresting descent into the darkest recesses of human suffering, cutting together different film stocks to create a nightmarish vision of a city under constant surveillance from CCTV cameras, mobile phones and nosey neighbours.

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Drew introduces his central protagonists in the best way he knows how: with a potty-mouthed rap and some similarly gritty imagery.

It’s a cute injection of pace that keeps the first hour zipping along at a fair lick before the sinewy plot strands become entangled and the screen glisters with anguish and despair.

Drug dealer Ed (Ed Skrein) is caught in a police sting and he quickly off loads incriminating evidence to associate Aaron (Riz Ahmed).

Flashbacks to their formative years at St Erica’s children’s home for boys affirm their fraternal bond.

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While Aaron waits for Ed’s release from custody, he crosses paths with illegal immigrant Katya (Natalie Press), who has been sold into sex trafficking and must make a stark decision about the future of her newborn child.

Torn between his head and his heart, Aaron faces an agonising choice of his own that has dramatic repercussions for the scheming landlord of the Earl of Essex pub and his wife Carol (Jo Hartley).

Aaron also encounters junkie Michelle (Anouska Mond), who stumbles down a sickening and destructive path in search of her next hit.

Elsewhere, schoolboy Jake (Ryan De La Cruz) attempts to blag some gear from gang leader Marcel (Nick Sagar), but acceptance comes at a price.

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“Go over there and smash him in. Then you’ll get your stuff!” orders Marcel, pointing to Jake’s timid classmate.

Former dealer Kirby (Keith Coggins) tries to re-assimilate into a world that dragged him down 15 years ago.

Meanwhile, emotionally volatile dealer Chris (Lee Allen) loses his cool when his younger sister is caught in the crossfire of a revenge shooting and two sassy teenagers, with dreams of a modelling contract, are in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Ill Manors is an assured debut that uses a robust script as a solid foundation for flashes of directorial brio.

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The fractured chronology allows Drew to hold back dramatic resolutions to the myriad conflicts until the very last second, intimating hope where there turns out to be none whatsoever.

The ensemble cast reward the writer-director with compelling portrayals of tortured souls who have almost given up hope of escaping the misery.

In most cases, their pessimism is well placed.

Rating: 6.5/10

Contains swearing sex and violence.

Release date: Wednesday, June 6

Review by Damon Smith

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