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Kidulthood(2006)

R
Movie1h 29mEnglishDrama
6.9
User Score
72%
Critic Score
IMDb
Director: Menhaj Huda
Writer: Noel Clarke

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Overview

A day in the life of a group of troubled 15-year-olds growing up in west London.

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Featured Comments/Tips

Very annoying movie. That dialogue was cringey.... It'#39;s like ghetto wid attitudes, man. Mash um up blud. Blud, yeah. Blud. Blud, man... Who wants to listen to that for over an hour? The music was awful. The characters were half dimensional. The story was boring. It'#39;s a movie that tries to say to the world '#39;look were have scary ghetto culture too y'#39;know blud innit man.'#39; It'#39;s a news scare story about youth culture made into a movie.

This movie was well done. I haven'#39;t seen much of the UK'#39;s '#34;gangsta'#34; movies but this one def hit the mark for adding to my collection. I also loved the fact that Tony from Skins was in the movie (hosting the party). I love skins, and this was like a fast paced Skins movie.

Featured User Reviews

The Yoof of today eh! Britain’s answer to Larry Clark’s Kids, Kidulthood works hard for realism and shock value but falls somewhere in between. Story focuses on a group of London youngsters who have been given the day off school when one of their classmates commits suicide after being bullied. The various groups of friends spin off to do their own thing, which invariably involves drugs, violence, casual sex, teenage pregnancy angst, revenge and lots of cussing in street speak. All this is crammed into a 24 hour period, suggesting that the yoof of today never live a dull moment when not at school. Writer Noel Clarke (who also stars) and director Menhaj Huda clearly want to keep things raw and authentic, but it eventually comes off as wholly unbelievable. In fact it at times feels like it’s a bunch of mates making a film and living out some fantasies where they get to be wicked for a day. There’s some messages in the mix trying to break out of the hysteria, to be a wake-up call to parents and elders as to what is happening under our noses, but ultimately sensationalism wins the day. It’s a film strung together by a number of instances, characterisation and reasoning is given short shrift, the makers over egging the pudding in their unrelenting mission to shock. Some scenes are undeniably attention grabbing, while the soundtrack pulses away with verve and Brian Tufano’s cinematography is right on the money, but come the preachy finale you may feel you really haven’t learned anything new about the unruly and unfeeling kids of today. 6/10

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