The scale of that set was the tipoff: here were creatives thinking big (key lines in Eccleston's opening narration: "this could be any city; they're all the same") and prepared to warp and razz the realism that had been Brit cinema's stock-in-trade for the better part of three decades. It was still identifiably British, as demonstrated by an odd little time-capsule moment: McGregor's wastrel telly addict chuckling at Lose a Million, the Chris Tarrant-hosted game show subsequently overwritten by Who Wants to be a Millionaire?. (A later clip from The Wicker Man now seems to announce the Boyle who masterminded the London 2012 opening ceremony.) Yet its dynamics were something else: the film was slick, irreverent, mischievous in a way the American movies we'd grown up watching were. That confidence was helpful, because it ushered us past Hodge's shakier plotting: I'm still not sure how our trio of anti-heroes get so many dead bodies downstairs without the neighbours noticing, nor why Alex and Juliet stay put after David starts waving a drill around. Thankfully, Boyle's feel for casting and personality is vastly more secure: we know the leads are in mortal danger once Peter Mullan is revealed as one of the goons closing in on them, and individual scenes gain considerably from the interplay between Fox's abrasive matter-of-factness, Eccleston's quiet intensity and McGregor's shit-eating grin. Next stop: Trainspotting. These were careers that hit the ground running, and then some.
Shallow Grave returns to selected cinemas from tomorrow.
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