Tuesday, 3 March 2026

No exits: "The Circle" and "Crimson Gold"


To consolidate the success of
It Was Just an Accident, MUBI have this week made the bulk of the Jafar Panahi back catalogue available to stream. One temptation is to revisit these films as historical texts, representative of that great wave of Iranian cinema that broke on these shores around the turn of the millennium: a wave headed by those generational auteurs Abbas Kiarostami and Mohsen Makhmalbaf, with Panahi - then an emergent talent, working from other people's scripts - somewhere in the middle, and younger female voices (Samira Makhmalbaf, Marzieh Meshkini, Mania Akbari) defying the country's status quo in making supremely eyecatching debuts. The other is to claim these films as historical markers. Panahi's early work invites positioning as equidistant between the Iran of the 1970s and the Iran of the 2020s: the bustling life of the old, liberal Tehran is still visible in these images, but behind the scenes the rules were now being applied with greater force. If it wasn't yet a full crackdown - Panahi was still relatively free to roam the streets and tell these stories, had no reason to dodge or fear the authorities - the pressure was surely being felt, the noose imperceptibly tightening; this was the right climate in which to make thrillers of a kind. Yet over and above all else, upon sitting down once again with 2000's The Circle and 2003's Crimson Gold, you're confronted with potent, urgent cinematic art - and it's that urgency which finally grabs and strikes you. These films aren't dusty artefacts; rather, they show recent history looping back around on itself.

Sensing a change of wind direction, the artful, politic Kiarostami had spent much of the 1990s drifting further into the Iranian countryside, seeking material that was either abstract or fabular: the stuff it's always much easier to get past the censors. Panahi would eventually be forced out that way, too, but around the millennium, he was making life harder for himself by remaining in the heart of the city, shooting lived reality and having his characters zig and zag between public spaces and backalleys. (Some shoots require built-in escape routes.) The Circle, co-written with Kambuzia Partovi, was a compendium of women's stories, presenting as either a doomy Arabian Nights or an A-grade on the Bechdel test. It opens with the sound of a new mother giving birth and the sight of a grandmother aghast that the child is a girl and not the desired boy, then falls into the orbit of a trio of young women - one of whom has barely registered before she's carted off by police - attempting to shepherd their youngest, who has a conspicuous (and never explained) black eye, on a bus out of town. From the off, it's a motion picture because its characters have to keep moving. We pick up some of their reasons as they go, but we grasp far more of the restrictions imposed upon them: they can't smoke (as their male counterparts can), they can't travel as freely as they'd hope, those movements are limited at every turn by the authorities, and doors are often openly slammed in their face. In the film's most terrifying sequence, two men on a bike burst into a family home housing a woman who's just been released from custody; God (or Allah) knows what's going on behind that closed door, but it's as forceful a metaphor as any for what was going on inside this country under this regime, away from the eyes of the world. As in most compendiums, certain stories here prove more immediately compelling than others, but the underlying insinuation of that title - a narrative route map that could just as easily describe a void - is bracing: this Iran is a country where it would be very easy for people - and for women, in particular - to disappear, never to be seen, filmed or heard from again.

Crimson Gold, Panahi's first out-and-out masterpiece, is in itself a circle, albeit in the Dantean sense. It opens with a botched jewel heist shot in such a way as to suggest that what's going on outside is at least as important as what's going on inside; from its arresting first moments, it's a thriller with more than half an eye on 21st century Iran. The task Panahi and Kiarostami (here on screenwriting duties) set themselves, in the extended flashback that follows, is to explain how the heavy-set robber Hossein (Hossein Emadeddin) got here, and was driven to take his own life at the scene of the crime. (An alternative title quickly suggests itself: No Way Out.) When we rejoin him, Hossein is a lowly pizza delivery driver (and, we learn, military veteran) being pushed towards petty crime by the direness of his personal circumstances. Notionally, as a man, he has greater mobility than the women of The Circle: his scooter affords him and us ample scope to case various neighbourhoods - again, tantalising glimpses here of Tehran as it once was and could still be - and determine the best areas and places to stick up. But it's still finally not enough. When Hossein first shows up at the fateful jewellers, to get his engagement ring adjusted, the door is slammed in his face by the suspicious proprietor. When he finally gets inside as a customer - because he and his bride have dressed up for the occasion - they're obliged to wait while a couple with more money receive the full VIP treatment. (There's an argument that the jeweller, redirecting Hossein towards the cheap gold of a nearby bazaar, is asking for trouble.) It's a sorry and sorrowful state of affairs: as an older colleague who seeds the idea of robbery puts it, "if you want to arrest a thief, you'll have to arrest the world entire".

For the better part of ninety minutes, Panahi gets us to walk several miles in some old, worn-out shoes, and realise why someone might be driven to the end of their tether like this. In an early sequence, a broken lift obliges Hossein to climb four full flights of stairs to reach one customer's swanky apartment - and Panahi's camera tracks every weary, exhausted step. Even when our guy's doing his job, there's no guarantee of payment: one night, he gets caught up in a police crackdown on parties, affording him a front-row seat to state oppression (and the fun that forever appears several floors out of reach) while his pizzas turn cold in their box. Much of this fits the Manny Farber definition of termite art, scrabbling around unfussily at street level while somehow summoning an existential sense of despair: our weary footsoldier's conversation with the young cop carrying out orders could be Hamlet and the gravedigger, transposed to the Middle East. Emadeddin, who'd been diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic in real life, reportedly made life hell for Panahi during filming, but his casting is key to the whole film. Hossein is kind of a stooge - someone who wants what he cannot have, as made clear by his late-film interactions with the misogynist rich kid who seems like an Iranian equivalent of Jeremy the landlord in Mike Leigh's Naked - and even if his instincts and impulses become more legible as the film proceeds, he does look like someone carrying a far greater burden than mere margaritas, who might at any moment retreat into sullen immobility or start throwing his weight around. Unlike De Niro in Taxi Driver, however, he's not entirely putting this on. The Iranian authorities knew they couldn't cut Crimson Gold, because it was oppositional to its very bones; instead, they refused it a theatrical release, rendering it ineligible for Academy Award consideration among other slights. Soon, they'd be targeting not just the films, but the man who made them. What we know now is that Panahi not only endured this persecution, he outlived his persecutor-in-chief: you do wonder what he's feeling this week, heading to America for the Oscars with his country in the state it now is.

The Circle and Crimson Gold are now streaming on MUBI.

In memoriam: Tom Noonan (Telegraph 02/03/26)


Tom Noonan
, who has died aged 74, was a gentle giant of an actor who excelled as author Thomas Harris’s second most terrifying creation: Francis Dollarhyde, the so-called “Tooth Fairy” killer in Michael Mann’s ambient thriller Manhunter (1986). The role hinged on the unnerving contrast between Noonan’s imposing 6’5” frame and his softly spoken, quasi-professorial manner; critic Roger Ebert would describe the actor as “tall, balding and born to play Death in The Seventh Seal”.

As Noonan later revealed, he landed the part after channelling his anger at seeing his audition repeatedly delayed: “[Mann] said, ‘You’re really scary. How do you do that?’ I said, ‘Michael, the secret to being scary is to be really scared. Because when you’re really scared, people are really scared of you.’ I was really poor and desperate, and this [was] a real part. I proceeded then to turn it down about five times. I said, ‘I’m not doing it for under $100,000.’ My agent said, ‘You’re crazy.’ Somehow, they ended up giving me that amount of money.”

Though Mann kept Noonan away from his co-stars to heighten tensions, the actor proved a wily foe. “I found out later that Noonan was acting in a very spooky way,” Mann recalled, “[He was] kind of creeping around and spying on some actors almost as if he was stalking them.” Noonan’s performance was a lesson in the sly craft of the character actor: appearing around Manhunter’s halfway point, Dollarhyde promptly grabs film, lead William Petersen and indeed the viewer by the throat.

The impression was so forceful that Noonan immediately fell subject to typecasting: Frankenstein’s monster in the teen horror The Monster Squad (1987), the villain in RoboCop 2 (1989). More inventively, he was also cast as Tom Noonan, the actor portraying serial killer The Ripper in the postmodern Arnie blockbuster Last Action Hero (1993), though Noonan confessed to some bemusement as to his newly illustrious circumstances: “It was not easy for me to fake being a movie star.”

That sizeable payday, however, allowed Noonan to finance and direct What Happened Was… (1994), based on his own play. Shot in eleven days for $300,000, this disarming two-hander followed co-workers (played by Noonan and Karen Sillas) navigating an awkward first date. After winning Sundance’s Grand Jury Prize, the film fell victim to spotty distribution, but its admirers included a young Charlie Kaufman, who declared himself profoundly influenced by a film Noonan described as “what’s happening in the dark inside your heart”.

Thomas Patrick Noonan was born in Greenwich, Connecticut on April 12, 1951, one of four children to dentist John Noonan and his maths teacher wife Rita (née McGannon). At St. Mary’s High School, his height made him a natural basketball star: “A lot of the skills that you would need for acting come through that... [It’s] a life-and-death struggle in front of people that you hope to impress.”

He won raves as the oldest son Tilden in the original 1978 production of Sam Shepard’s Pulitzer-winning Buried Child, then caught the New Hollywood’s coattails. After debuting on screen in Paul Mazursky’s Willie & Phil (1980), he befriended John Cassavetes while making Gloria (1980), but clashed with Michael Cimino during Heaven’s Gate (1980): “He pointed a blank gun at my face… He was really crazy.”

In 1983, Noonan founded the Paradise Factory theatre in Manhattan, funding it via roles in such studio filler as the Dudley Moore vehicle Best Defence (1984). But he was getting somewhere: prior to Manhunter, he’d auditioned for the Dennis Hopper role in Blue Velvet (1986). Post-Manhunter, he worked constantly, notably shaking De Niro down for better pay as the hacker Kelso in Mann’s Heat (1995); in “Paper Hearts”, a 1996 episode of The X-Files, Noonan played John Lee Roche, a killer teasing information about Agent Mulder’s missing sister. 

Long-time fan Kaufman cast Noonan as Philip Seymour Hoffman’s onscreen double in Synecdoche, New York (2008) and the voice of every supporting character in the stopmotion Anomalisa (2015). Noonan’s final directorial credit, The Shape of Something Squashed (2014), was inspired by his experience standing in for Donald Sutherland during rehearsals for a Hunger Games sequel; his last appearances were on TV, lending his voice to HBO’s adult animation Animals. (2018) and playing the Pallid Man in the rebooted 12 Monkeys (2015-18).

In 2021, Noonan revealed he’d pitched a What Happened Was… sequel to Netflix, reuniting the central couple thirty years on. Though the project was never realised, he held firm to an idea that art should offer something more than mere escapism: “I don’t think you go to a play to forget or to a movie to be distracted. I think life generally is a distraction and that going to a movie is a way to get back, not go away.”

He married twice, to the actresses Karen Young and Talia Lugacy; both ended in divorce. He is survived by Felix and Wanda, his two children by Young.

Tom Noonan, born April 12, 1951, died February 14, 2026.

Monday, 2 March 2026

For what it's worth...




UK box office Top Ten (for the weekend of February 20-22, 2026):

1 (1) "Wuthering Heights" (15)
2 (2) GOAT (PG)
3 (3) Crime 101 (15)
4 (6) Zootropolis 2 (PG)
5 (new) The Secret Agent (15)
6 (new) Cold Storage (15) ****
7 (4) Send Help (15) ***
8 (new) Wasteman (18) ***
9 (new) The Moment (15) **
10 (new) Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die (15)

(source: BFI)

My top five:
3. A Knight's Tale
5. The Circle [above]


DVD/Blu-Ray/Download top ten: 

1 (1) The Housemaid (15)
2 (2Zootropolis 2 (PG)
3 (7) Dracula (15)
4 (12) We Bury The Dead (15)
5 (4) Sinners (15) ****
6 (16) A Minecraft Movie (PG)
7 (25) Sisu: Road to Revenge (15) ****
8 (3) Predator: Badlands (12) **
9 (29) Dogma (15)
10 (5) Anaconda (12)


My top five: 
1. Sisu: Road to Revenge
4. Keeper


Top five films on terrestrial TV this week:
1. The Lady Vanishes (Sunday, BBC Two, 12.10pm)
2. Raiders of the Lost Ark (Sunday, ITV1, 3.30pm and Thursday, ITV1, 10.45pm)
3. Spider-Man 2 (Sunday, BBC One, 3.35pm)
4. Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol (Saturday, Channel 4, 10.15pm)
5. The Simpsons Movie (Saturday, Channel 4, 12.25pm)

Friday, 27 February 2026

Human traffic: "Sirāt"


So here, finally, is Sirāt, 2025's most heralded item of experiential cinema: cheered at Cannes, propelled around the secondary festival circuit on quite the wave of hype, and thereafter ushered up the awards-season red carpet as an example of what a more adventurous cinema can do. On some level, the new film forms a continuation of its Galician director Oliver Laxe's investigations into states of being. 2019's Fire Will Come set us down in the middle of countryside set ablaze, leading me to conclude my review by wondering whether Laxe was the Red Adair racing to the movies' aid or perhaps its sensation-chasing Keith Flint, armed with a camera and a large box of matches. Sirāt, which takes its name from the bridge said to connect heaven and hell, describes what it is to find yourself in the Moroccan desert for whatever reason; for any kind of enjoyment, take bottled water. This time around, Laxe sets us down among sweaty ravers - played, as we deduce from some of the haircuts and movements, by actual scenesters. They're here to party, as demonstrated by an opening setpiece that shows the group assembling and tesselating vast bass bins along a desert plain and thereafter unleashing a thumping wall of sound. (All of a sudden, my throwaway Prodigy reference in the earlier review doesn't seem so arbitrary: take bottled water and ear protection.) But there's also someone else in the mix: a portly, greying middle-aged man, played by the unmistakable figure of arthouse talisman Sergi López, who's pursuing a very different agenda. He's ventured this way, young son in tow, to search for a daughter who went missing from this scene some time before. This line of dramatic inquiry would be compelling enough in itself - here's a gatecrasher, someone where they wouldn't ordinarily be - but there's also something else going on, over the heads of the ravers and over the film's immediate horizons. All of a sudden, military vehicles show up to halt this apparently illegal gathering; as some part of this circus breaks off to roll ever deeper into the desert, the radio talks of explosions in the city, of refugees and war. Is it possible we've just been watching the last party on Earth?

That's quite some question for a film to pose, and at its best, Sirāt proves as rattling as everybody's said. (To put it in ravers' terms: it's ultimately a bad trip, but its highs are pretty high.) It's not merely what emerges from those bass bins, the sternest test of your local cinema's sound system since the last Michael Bay film; it's those devil-may-care partygoers, endlessly pursuing the next thrill. One sequence here, in which this party traverses the mountains via several miles of perilously bad road, triggered an ultra-specific stress response in me: memories of being on a nightbus caught up in chest-high flashflooding during a Spanish holiday in the 1990s. Then there are the bad vibes that follow, the growing sense everything's going to hell, via mountain pass, celestial bridge or other means entirely. (Does anyone remember when going to the movies was fun, rather than a test of nerve?) Laxe, in fairness, is keeping one eye out for companionship - a friend for the end of the world - in this case the unlikely companionship the genial family man, huffing and puffing his way up and over these hillsides, finds among angular shapethrowers with tattoos and piercings. In such stretches, Sirāt shapes up as among our more oblique migration movies: it recognises that, in times of upheaval, different worlds become fellow travellers, pooling money, intelligence and resources to ensure their survival. Yet even here, we're led to wonder whether the missing daughter fled because she found the normalcy the father represents too stifling, and whether any good can possibly come from a reunion. 

What the film centres, then, is a tentative alliance, riven with tensions at every turn: Laxe has basically found his way to filming those areas in Glastonbury where folks prepared to spend £1000 a night to house their family in a yurt while attending wellness sessions intersect with/rub up against those anarcho-syndicalist stalwarts who've shown up for the Corbyn speech and the Runrig reunion. Still, the film tails off badly; I'm amazed quite how seriously some have taken Sirāt, given the abject silliness of its closing section. At a crucial point - roughly once these drifters reach salt flats improbably studded with landmines - Laxe's film becomes less spiritual than logistical, veering into genre territory without understanding the terrain. It gets booming in a different way here - bombastic, really - and Laxe's po-faced direction finally strands his performers at the border of absurd and ridiculous: you half-expect Graham Chapman to wander on in the guise of corporal or copper, telling everyone to wrap things up and go home. The film's achievement lies in using its enervated characters - zonked figures in a landscape, looking off into the middle distance - to square the arthouse and the club, to find the unlikely centreground connecting, say, Antonioni with Tony De Vit. It's a fairly niche achievement, granted - some measure down on the countercultural landmarks of the 1960s and 1970s - but then the movies are fairly niche at the moment, so here we all are: there's a reason Sirāt hasn't leapt from the Best Foreign Language Film shortlist and onto the season's Best Picture lists as The Secret Agent has - and as It Was Just An Accident, a far more assured journey into the heart of authoritarianism and the desert of human despair, really should have.

Sirāt opens in selected cinemas today. 

Thursday, 26 February 2026

The real green menace: "Cold Storage"


Here's an unexpected comeback. Twenty years ago, a youthful British TV director, Jonny Campbell, made an abortive leap from the small to the big screen with the largely nondescript Ant & Dec vehicle Alien Autopsy. (I say largely nondescript because the supporting cast featured a bemused Harry Dean Stanton and a pre-tax, pre-surgery, pre-Riyadh Jimmy Carr, together at last; it's streaming on Prime, if you really must.) Maybe Campbell - who's spent the intervening decades compiling increasingly ambitious and impressive telly credits (Ashes to Ashes, Doctor Who, Westworld, Am I Being Unreasonable?) - felt he owed it to himself to give it another go, or maybe he's one of those single-issue filmmakers: either way, his spry, splattery B-movie Cold Storage, adapted by David Koepp from his own novel, hinges on a parasitic alien fungus that fell to Earth with Skylab in 1979 and has taken the form of an extra-malevolent pesto, finishing off everyone it garnishes. A prologue offers an unlikely Ordinary Love reunion, with a hazmat-suited Liam Neeson and Lesley Manville poking nervily around an Outback town whose residents have succumbed to these deadly green globules; the samples they take away are quarantined in a Kansas military facility that, as the years pass, gets haphazardly decommissioned and thereafter converted into the kind of self-storage facility that now provides the backdrop to countless locker-raiding reality shows on Bravo and Quest. We rejoin the action on one very eventful night shift, as the quarantine period conclusively expires and the facility's bored staffers - chatty slacker Joe Keery and conscientious single mom Georgina Campbell - go exploring with grisly yet funny consequences.

It's all a bit unlikely, in truth: corner-cutting awards-season counterprogramming shot many miles away from where it's notionally set (the end credits suggest nobody ventured further than continental Europe), with a ragbag cast drawn from the available and willing. But it's a production founded on long-lost multiplex virtues; viewers of a certain vintage could be forgiven for believing they were sat watching it at the Showcase circa 1995. (Just after Koepp's breakthrough with the Jurassic Park script, in other words.) The MVP here is production designer Elena Albanese, an MCU survivor who hands Campbell a non-virtual set that keeps revealing new levels and depths from the moment Keery decides to take a sledgehammer to the foyer wall. Koepp, though, runs her a close second. As evidenced by the initially gruff back-and-forths between Neeson's aging hero and his rookie Homeland Security pointwoman (Ellora Torchia) or Keery and Campbell's more genial badinage, this script is simply much better written than these things tend to be - and certainly far better written than Sam Raimi's Send Help, the movie's current box-office rival. Collectively, Campbell and Koepp have packed a lot into these 99 minutes, not least a witty brevity; the VFM quotient here is quite something. The storage facility also attracts, in no particular order, a larcenous biker gang, a suicidal Vanessa Redgrave (yes, that Vanessa Redgrave), a crazed deer and a CG cockroach (thereby establishing this cursed building's altogether batty ecosystem) and, come the finale, an old-school nuclear device with big red numbers ticking down on its side. That the whole proves a vast improvement on Alien Autopsy is almost a given; the surprise is that Cold Storage is more enjoyable than anything else currently stalking your local Odeon.

Cold Storage is now showing in cinemas nationwide.

Evanescence: "The Moment"


Movies and pop music snuggle up once again. First there was Barbie summer, then there was Brat, in which Letterboxd's most illustrious contributor Charli XCX proposed a Muppet Babies variant of the messy-women's lib pop culture pushed into vogue (and, doubtless, Vogue) as this century gathered pace. Now Brat's creative prime mover offers an A24-backed mockumentary, The Moment, composed along postmodern, Kneecap-like lines as simultaneously artistic self-mythologising and an insider's guide to What Charli Did Next. As Aidan Zamiri's film has it, this mostly involves the singer retreating behind Dylanesque dark glasses (don't look back) and reacting with varying levels of Brat (and Grump) to the idea of doing anything - perhaps unsurprisingly, given the options being set before her by a label desperate to capitalise on all things Brat. In order of the priority The Moment affords them, these include an Amazon-sponsored concert film overseen by a "visionary" director (Alexander Skarsgård) who proceeds to make a total nuisance of himself, and copious branding opportunities, most disastrously a Brat credit card targeted at Charli's queer fanbase that serves much the same narrative purpose as Krusty Burger's LGBTQBLT ("How can a ploy this cynical and shameless fail?") did in The Simpsons. Last and least on the list of priorities, to the extent no-one in the movie even thinks to talk about it: new music. (One surprise awaiting fans is how little Charli there is on the soundtrack; perhaps she was clean out of inspiration post-"Wuthering Heights".) If the Charli we see on screen is keen to resist positioning - going so far as to whisk herself away to an Ibizan health spa when it all gets too much - the Charli making the film is doing nothing but. The Moment exists principally to raise the possibility that whatever she does next may be Brat, but may not be anything like as hot, happening or indeed successful. Zamiri's film may have already borne this out by opening at a lowly number nine at the UK box office, albeit in a competitive week for new releases.


For fullest enjoyment, you may need to be more invested in Brat as a concept than this viewer, who still thinks of Roger Kitter whenever he hears that particular B-word, and to find the machinations of the music industry (or of the music industry as presented in The Moment) inherently fascinating. As it is, I spent most of the film's 103 minutes wondering whether Charli might have been better off playing a character with autobiographical traits, as Gaga surely did in A Star is Born, rather than merely playing herself (or "herself"). That might have proved both a riskier and more rewarding strategy; in this version, the singer is all too visibly playing the kind of diva-in-waiting that Madonna - an even savvier performer in matters of public image - was being in 1991's In Bed with Madonna, her pre-rehearsed tantrums carefully controlled, her mid-strop breathwork impeccable. Zamiri's film is above all else a document of a moment where the bulk of our popstars have been stage-schooled. Dotted around Charli, we get celebrity hangers-on (Rachel Sennott, Kylie Jenner, Julia Fox), interspersed with actors who've fared better in mockumentaries with far funnier, more purposeful scripts (Jamie Demetriou, Alex Macqueen). At least Skarsgård, whose moment this may ultimately be, is enjoying himself, albeit in the stock role of the clueless male creative; the one distinction is that you won't have seen that role filled by someone quite this handsome. What's semi-interesting about The Moment is its foundational sourness about the music business: exhausting and malformed when not plain opportunistic, geared predominantly towards snuffing out original or personal expression, this is not an industry anyone would choose to get into or stay within for long. (One way of explaining the film to those over the age of fifty: it's Charli XCX's Slade in Flame. Or even Charli's "Radio Musicola".) The movie business, for once, has stepped up in this respect, enabling this particular performer to do what she wants to do and say what she wants to say. Still, the moment Zamiri chronicles here for Charli has passed; so too, by the time you read this, will The Moment.

The Moment is now playing in cinemas nationwide.

Monday, 23 February 2026

Lock up: "Wasteman"


Wasteman
 is the New British Realism mob that gave the world Adolescence shifting their attention from schooling to the prison system. David Jonsson's Taylor is a manslaughter inmate who's been trying to get through his sentence in a narcotics-induced haze; the fug around his head lifts momentarily after he's informed he'll be released on parole - as part of Government plans to relieve overcrowding - if he can stay out of trouble for just a few more weeks. The trouble is he finds this out at precisely the point his own cell becomes overcrowded: his new cellmate Dee (Tom Blyth) is a ne'er-do-well with a neck tattoo who walks on bellowing "The Good Life" in a bloodspattered sweatshirt, turns the pair's notionally shared space into a hectic combination of tuckshop and import-export business, and promptly vows to initiate a turf war with rival dope pushers in a bid to take over the facility entire. In some ways, Dee's not unlike the movie he's in, one of those modestly budgeted Britpics that looks like an expansion of pre-existing TV: muscling past Jimmy McGovern's recent BBC hit Life - and towards the realms of HBO's Oz - with its 18 certificate, Wasteman also retains an air of especially brutal sitcom in describing what proves, for both of these young lags, a most unfortunate (and untimely) flatshare. (It's Porridge with a pool ball in a sock.) Weirdly, it'd even make an unlikely but lively double-bill with last year's crossover hit Pillion, in that it's about two men wrestling - sometimes literally - for position and power. (For motorcycling leathers, swap in drably institutional duds.)

Above all, however, this is that rare kind of Britpic that appears to work for everyone. For those of us looking on, the premise is familiar but inherently dramatic, often tense. Writers Hunter Andrews and Eoin Doran and director Cal McMau get to nudge their way into the industry conversation - and, indeed, last night's BAFTAs - by showing they've absorbed the many recent newspaper exposes of prison life (drug-drop drones! Prohibited cellphone use!); the plot here is by definition self-contained - 90 minutes, much of that time spent on lockdown with bunkbound protagonists - but McMau opens the drama up via mobile-phone footage of what's going on beyond the boys' cell. (Mostly gangland posturing, as it happens, with the occasional grace note: the weariness of a seasoned guard as he's called in from his break by an alarm, the eerie quiet of a riot's aftermath.) The distributors can slap an eyecatching title on all this and sell it to that strain of agitated youth who are permanently cruising cinemas for a bruising. And the actors get to attempt something swaggering and street-tough in close-up, a chance actors generally leap at, given some of the names they were called during their time at theatre school. Casting supremo Kharmel Cochrane calls in all those day players who've been chased away from other auditions for looking like they might steal off with the producer's car, and the leads are (perhaps perversely) a good match. Blyth, who broke through in last year's Plainclothes, captures the mannerisms of a small and not terribly intelligent individual trying to be big and clever: he has to trade in swag because he has nothing else to offer, but he's charismatic company until he turns. And Jonsson, continuing his early-career quest to play every type of role under the sun (Rye Lane, Alien: Nemesis, The Long Walk), gives us a new type of inmate: a nerd, essentially - a scientist incarcerated for getting his sums wrong - who now has to use his brain to keep himself alive. He has a great face for fatigue and suffering, both of which are much in demand here: I hope he can pick up a few cheerier roles along the way, but he could well become this generation's John Hurt.

Wasteman is now playing in selected cinemas.