My Brother the Devil,
the hugely impressive first feature from British-Egyptian director
Sally El Hosaini, applies the duality beloved of 1930s crime melodramas –
two brothers, set on divergent paths – to a housing estate in
latter-day East London. Lad-about-town Rashid (James Floyd), son to
loving Egyptian parents, finds himself caught between entering the
workforce and going legit, and loyalty to a local heavy for whom he
sometimes deals dope and coke. Meanwhile, Rash’s younger, brighter
sibling Mo (Fady Elsayed) is himself at a crossroads, weighing up
whether to strike out for college or to stay local and while away the
afternoons playing Grand Theft Auto, waiting for real crime to get
involved with.
Upon
entering this world, most directors choose to close the image down,
emphasising how claustrophobic and forbidding certain estates can be:
even Andrea Arnold’s superior Fish Tank shot in the TV-ready Academy
ratio. By contrast, El Hosaini – working with the talented
cinematographer David Raedeker – opens her film up at every juncture,
spotting the greenery that persists, even flourishes, at the fringes of
this particular milieu, and the possibilities the central pair might yet
enjoy beyond the limitations of their immediate environment. Clichés
are dodged; new and surprising perspectives are found.
Said
Taghmaoui, from Mathieu Kassovitz’s urban landmark La Haine, plays
Sayyid, a photographer who instructs Rashid to see his world with new
eyes, telling him “it’s about where you put the frame” – and My Brother
the Devil indirectly poses searching questions about the morality of
camera placement, eschewing the empty sensationalism of Noel Clarke’s
Kidulthood franchise. Do you ghettoise your characters, presenting them
as a species with their own exotic lingo and skintones – in effect,
caging them up like zoo animals for wider public enjoyment – or do you
strive to see the bigger picture, the life extending beyond the image?
El Hosaini picks the latter route, granting her characters the room to
breathe, think, even change.
It’s
Rashid and Mo who box themselves in here, not the film, which
constantly offers these brothers a helping hand or way out: even the
pokiest of Raedeker’s set-ups keeps a door, a window, a ladder in shot
as a graspable idea of escape. One shot of Rashid gazing over the river
to the looming O2 Arena (formerly the Millennium Dome) underlines the
fact these characters aren’t so far away from mainstream society, though
clearly there are divides that need bridging before they can get there.
Elevated by lively, wholly convincing supporting performances – and, in
particular, by Floyd and Elsayed’s thoughtful, charismatic lead turns –
My Brother the Devil counts as the most critical and constructive, not
to mention most engrossing, cinematic contribution to the inner-city
debate since Saul Dibb’s Bullet Boy.
(MovieMail, November 2012)
My Brother the Devil screens on BBC1 tonight at 12.10am.
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