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Movie review – Cherrybomb (2009)

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We are familiar, of course, with Grint's work in the Harry Potter movies as Harry's funny and fiercely loyal best friend Ron Weasley. So it is particularly interesting to watch his performance as a Belfast youth, caught between a stable, comfortable home life and his desire to prove himself a dangerous bad boy' to impress the alluring Michelle and keep pace with his truly wild best friend Luke. In this film, Grint is unrecognizable from his Ron Weasely persona. He makes an impressive transformation, both physically, trading Ron's shaggy ginger locks for rockabilly slicked-back hair, and in his character. With an insouciant smirk and latent intensity behind a calm exterior, Grint is convincing as Malachy, a hard-partying guy who is essentially a good kid with a rebellious streak, an "A" student and a poet armed with a can of spray paint.

Robert Sheehan is perhaps not as well-known yet as his castmate, but he already has a long list of television and film credits in his resum, and he holds his own well against Grint, who is already a seasoned movie veteran at the ripe old age of twenty. Sheehan's character, a troubled young man with a knack for causing havoc, is also at times the most heart-breaking. The quintessential wounded soul trying and failing to hide behind a tough guy image. Whereas Grint's Malachy was played with the quiet subtlety befitting the anchor in Luke's life, Sheehan gives Luke a frenetic, nervous energy. We get the sense that if it weren't for Malachy's grounding presence, Luke could truly fall off the edge.

Kimberley Nixon, known to audiences for her role in the BBC series Cranford, was adept at rounding out what could have been a one-dimensional teen seductress role with an underlying vulnerability, showing the cracks in her shell that Malachy begins to break through as the story progresses. However, her character perhaps could have used some more development to make her truly sympathetic. It may be difficult for audiences to understand why she is driven to so destructively manipulate the two young men as she does. But she gives a good performance in her role as the catalyst that sets events in motion, and she has nice chemistry with Grint. Their love scene, which brought the film much early attention across the internet ("OMG, Ron Weasley has teh SEX!"), was a highlight of the film, surprisingly honest and tender, rather than gratuitous and graphic.

Drinking and drugs play a prominent role in the story, but it's never in a preachy, "kid's, don't let this happen to you" sort of way. It deals with teenage drug use as a frank fact of life for many kids, and doesn't set out to moralize about it, even in the drug-soaked climax of the movie that leads to it's shocking end. At the post-screening Q&A with the directors, one audience member asked, half-joking, "As a father of a 16-year old, I'd like to know: Is this what goes on behind my back?" The unspoken answer was, "Yes, unfortunately." But the story is not the cautionary tale we are used to seeing when adolescent drug use is depicted. It is essentially about the relationship of the three principals, and the motivations for rebellion that lie just beneath the surface.

A glimpse into Luke's family,' if it can even be called that, easily establishes what is behind his manic outbursts and overtly destructive acts calling for attention. Luke comes from a very broken home, with a pitiful, alcohol-addled father called Smiley (Lalor Roddy) who cowers under brutish bullying by his oldest son Chris (Paul Kennedy), Luke's drug-dealing, Irish mafioso brother. The atmosphere in Luke's home is of two people living under duress, held hostage by their dependence on a cruel, abusive man.

Like Luke, Michelle is starving for attention. She has been shipped to Belfast from London by her mother for the vaguely stated reason that she is "nothing but trouble" to see if her father, David Crilly (James Nesbitt), can make a go of trying to raise her and rein her in. Her father, however, is too distracted by work and his own affairs (literally), to pay Michelle the attention she craves, so she seeks it in Luke and Malachy, who are instantly attracted to her when she first walks into their lives. She uses her considerable feminine charms to lure the two best friends into a competition over her, each trying to top the other with teen male bravado that escalates into dangerous territory. "I am so going to fk her," Luke vows, watching Michelle's swinging hips as she walks away." "Not if I get there first, you're not," Malachy retorts. As the tagline says, "Game on."

Of the three, Malachy is the one with the most going for him. Unlike Luke, who deals drugs for his brother, he has an honest job at the Leisureplex working for Crilly. Malachy comes from a decent middle-class home, with caring, supportive parents who are interested in his life and his future prospects. When his report card comes in with six A's they throw a small dinner party to celebrate his achievement. But he is distracted by text messages from Michelle and Luke taunting him about the fact that they are out together while he's stuck with his family. Simmering with jealousy, he is easily coaxed into stealing his father's taxi to join them, with disastrous results. For Malachy, however, what starts out as a challenge aimed at Luke over Michelle evolves into something holding real emotion. The same ability to see value buried under Luke's pernicious tendencies allows Malachy to perceive the vulnerability in Michelle, and he becomes protective of her, which will prove to be to his detriment. It becomes apparent that he is falling for the young beauty. When Michelle's father gives up and is set to send her away again, Malachy tries to persuade her that he will go with her. "Where would we go?" she asks. "I don't know," Malachy admits. Then, with determined sincerity, "Does it matter?"

It is then Malachy's growing feelings for Michelle that becomes a source of bitter jealousy for Luke. Rather than fear of losing the challenge and losing his shot at Michelle, Luke becomes visibly unnerved that he may be losing Malachy, the only source of stability in his troubled life. An example of this is when Malachy pays Luke a visit to brag about his near-conquest of Michelle. It isn't that bit of information that bothers Luke, who is only too eager to hear the dirty details. The momentary flash of bitterness on Luke's face when Malachy confesses feelings for Michelle tells where Luke's real problem lies. While the boys celebrate Malachy's accomplishment over a couple of joints, Luke makes what on the surface sounds like an off-handed suggestion that the three of them should engage in, as he expressively puts it, a "spitroast." But is he really joking, or is this is a last ditch effort to hang on to something he feels is slipping away? Is he trying to reinsert himself (pun intended) with a proposed threesome when there is a danger the twosome of Malachy and Luke will give way to Malachy and Michelle?

While we know that Malachy is falling for Michelle, it is really the brotherly love between Luke and Malachy that is the heart of Cherrybomb. The true emotional sparks in the movie are in their scenes together, whether they are engaged in good-natured ribbing and boy banter, or furiously getting into each other's faces and even coming to blows. The strength of their friendship and their bond is tested to its limits, and it's the outcome of this test, and not who gets the girl, that is the ultimate point to the story.

As for the look of the film, Leyburn, Barros D'Sa, cinematographer Damian Elliot, and editor Nick Emerson worked within their small budget to create a film that is nonetheless visually striking, using interesting camera angles, shot composition, and editing to inject a definite style without becoming distracting. That the two directors come from a design background is apparent in the visual aspects of the film. This is especially true in the scenes of the drug-and-alcohol fueled parties in red-lit bars, dark athletic pitches, and most impressively, in the Leisureplex itself in a blow-out that blows up in the end. These scenes are shot with swaying camerawork and edited to dissolve in and out of focus between jump shots and montages to heighten the trippy, drugged-out feeling. But even in the quieter scenes, good use is made of close-ups of the highly expressive faces of the young stars, especially Grint and Sheehan, who are both exceptionally watchable and appealing in a real way, and not the perfect, pretty-boy Hollywood standard. To complement the interesting visuals, thefilm is propelled along with a great soundtrack of eclectic music by Irish/UK indie artists such as TwinKranes, Flykkiller, Cashier No.9, The Vendetta Suite, and DJ/composer David Holmes, to name a few.

As a foray into feature films, Cherrybomb is an impressive debut for the two directors and a glimpse of the good things to come from the three leads. The subject matter could have resulted in a clich-laden and formulaic product, but skillful direction, along with solid, earnest performances by the young cast avoid the pitfalls and achieve an absorbing and worthwhile film.

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Movie review Cherrybomb (2009)

By: christinareynold
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Movie review – Cherrybomb (2009) New York City