Having reassured us with that opening sequence, Bird quickly drifts further away from everyday British normality than Arnold has ever previously ventured. Yes, this camera takes in shopping precincts, towerblocks and bunkbeds alike, but the logic guiding its movements is dreamier than that of, say, 2006's Red Road or 2009's Fish Tank, synching with a heroine who forever seems on the verge of nodding off or waking up. (It explains Bailey's air of drowsiness, but the squat situation looks implausible in 2024, no matter how overstretched the authorities might be; these broken homes have been fractured altogether artfully.) Bird only begins to function narratively if we accept that Arnold has left social realism behind so as to flirt with magical realism, the trickiest of all genres to pull off in a cinema, dependent as it is on the viewer believing their eyes at all times. I fear it also only works if we then accept Arnold's redefinition of magical realism as "a series of random, mostly unconnected events". Gravesend here represents a fairytale kingdom, which may be a stretch for those who've never been there, and even for those who call it their home. The characters assume the same symbolic value as the caged pets and wild horses of Fish Tank: as his name indicates, Bird is less flesh-and-blood man than he is roaming metaphor, a representative of those migrants who have flocked to the Kent coast, and a model of a softer masculinity than Keoghan's brawling chancer or the toxic new boyfriend of Bailey's estranged mum. The "it really, really, really could happen" of Blur's "The Universal", which Arnold deploys as a recurring nursery rhyme or contemporary lullaby, sounds ever more like a director imploring us to close our eyes and take a leap of faith with her.
Above all else, Bird has visibly been conceived as a hangout movie: arrive at an interesting, underfilmed location with bankable actors, a bunch of kids, an e-scooter and a Spotify playlist and start to thrash something out on the spot before the rolling camera. That search for spontaneity yields convincing bursts of chaos, like the party scene where Keoghan and his fellow squatters do shots and shout along to Sleaford Mods, drowning out a TV bringing news of the effects of climate change on central Europe. (Arnold is not incorrect in intuiting everyone's looking for an escape of some kind right now.) And every now and again, we spy an inspired choice, something precise, evocative and lovely: cutaways to the squat's youngest inhabitant reveal a tousle-haired girl indifferent to the mess around her and determined to press on with her colouring-in regardless. As ever, Arnold proves in thrall to the adaptability of the young - but is she also getting a bit too hung up on it? There is, regrettably, a lot of flapping around where you want Bird to soar: all the graffiti doodled on squat walls and bus windows can't make up, in this instance, for characters that struggle to hold the attention and a wider failure to pursue angles for further dramatic exploration in anything like the satisfying depth of Arnold's earlier work. (Keoghan, notionally Bird's most saleable asset in our accursed, post-Saltburn universe, is the biggest victim of this, either sidelined or forgotten about in the edit.) What's flown the coop is the vice-like plotting of Red Road and Fish Tank, artefacts from a moment when Arnold was presumably still having to present a case to funding bodies in the form of a script rather than - as one assumes happened here - pitching a feature that came to her in a dream and then trying to fill in the gaps around a handful of key images. I don't want to be too down on something so idiosyncratic and personal: this is, after all, the version of this story only this filmmaker could have arrived at, a Wings of Desire raised on party rings and Greggs sausage rolls. But Bird finally lands among Arnold's weakest films, as sorely overstretched at two hours as American Honey was pushing three. It pains me to say it, but one of our best modern directors is going backwards.
Bird opens in selected cinemas from Friday.
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