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| CITADEL
(director/writer: Ciaran Foy; cinematographer: Tim
Fleming; editors: Tony Kearns/Jake
Roberts; music: Tomandandy;
cast: Aneurin
Barnard (Tommy Cowley), James Cosmo
(Priest), Jake Wilson (Danny), Wunmi Mosaku (Marie),
Amy Shiels (Joanne); Runtime: 86; MPAA Rating: R;
producers: Katie Holly/Brian Coffey;
Cinedigm Entertainment; 2012-UK) "Quite a chore sitting through such a muddled downer." Reviewed
by Dennis Schwartz Irish
filmmaker Ciaran Foy, in his debut feature
film, directs and writes an Attack the Block
and Candyman wannabe psychological urban horror story
that works its way through the dark hallways of public
housing (shot in the seedy low-income tower blocks in
Glasgow) and gets its kicks from a dirty
syringe plunged into a pregnant woman's belly, a
possible slit throat and a hellish romp into mindless
terror that might be only in the head. The ugly
reality-based nightmare story on urban violence and on
overcoming one's fears, is quite a chore sitting
through such a muddled downer. The story was inspired
by a vicious mugging witnessed by Foy. Meek
Irish slum resident Tommy (Aneurin Barnard) is
left with a baby daughter and a serious case of
agoraphobia, after witnessing young thugs pummel his
pregnant wife (Amy Shiels) in the
hallway of their building while he's stuck in a broken
elevator and nine months later his comatose wife is
taken off life support. The distraught widowed Tommy
is comforted by sympathetic, bleeding-heart liberal, black
hospice nurse (Wunmi Mosaku), and he receives
psychological counseling to overcome his imagined and
real fears of living in poverty in a dangerous urban
jungle. The stressed-out Tommy soon discovers these
unsupervised anti-social violent youths, all wearing
identical hoodies, have a strange history. When Tommy
teams up with an angry, foul-mouthed, local vigilante
priest (James Cosmo), somehow connected
to the demons, and a mystic blind child (Jake
Wilson) rescued from the violent teen gang, to
go after the monsters who kidnapped his daughter in
the abandoned housing project called "The Citadel",
planning to raise the baby to be like them. The
humorless and senselessly violent film turns way too
ridiculous to care about its resolution, as it's
revealed the hooligans might not even be human. The
slight film wants us to believe the menacing teen
villains can only see humans who are afraid of
them and all sorts of other blurry things it never
clears up. REVIEWED ON 11/9/2012 GRADE: C+ Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |