Tyrannosaur

Paddy Considine’s directorial debut is grim, yet far from original

Tyrannosaur

© CHANNEL FOUR TELEVISION / UK FILM COUNCIL / EM MEDIA / OPTIMUM RELEASING / WARP X / INFLAMMABLE FILMS 2010

Director: Paddy Considine
Starring: Peter Mullan, Olivia Colman, Eddie Marsan
Time Out rating:
Japanese title: Shi Shuki

Joseph (Peter Mullan) is God’s lonely man, a shambling, drunken widower, at odds with the world and prone to bouts of rage. He finds a kindred spirit in dumpy charity shop worker Hannah (Olivia Colman), whose buoyant exterior masks the appalling humiliations she’s suffering at the hands of her vile, sexually depraved husband, James (Eddie Marsan).

With this impassioned and unrelentingly bleak directorial debut, Paddy Considine – formerly best known as Shane Meadows’s regular leading man – reveals himself as a strong director of actors. Mullan and Marsan deliver a pair of forceful, if familiar, performances, and the supporting cast are all near-perfect.

Special mention, though, goes to actress and comedienne Colman, whose astonishing turn as Hannah scales the same excruciatingly fragile heights as Emily Watson in Breaking the Waves. Her work is exemplary: technically polished without feeling studied, empathetic but never overbearing or saccharine. One scene has her weeping in the storeroom of her charity shop while guzzling vodka, then switching in a heartbeat to a picture of happiness when a customer enters. It’s a shame that Colman is shortchanged by Considine’s writing and direction, which is prone to excess: one trite moment has her wailing abuse at a portrait of Jesus. There’s another instance where Joseph is sat in the pub psychotically muttering to himself, an off-hand morsel of virtuosic acting that confuses rather than enlightens. And whichever way you slice it, the story never feels fully plausible.

The supple, close-proximity camerawork by cinematographer Erik Wilson complements the material nicely, though the same can’t be said of the wan acoustica that crops up constantly on the soundtrack. The film says that a violent way of life is always punished, sometimes physically, always psychologically. It’s not a particularly deep or unique statement, but Considine howls it with sincerity and conviction.

Tyrannosaur opens at Shinjuku Musashinokan on October 20



By David Jenkins
Please note: All information is correct at the time of writing but is subject to change without notice.

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