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Boy A [DVD]
 
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Boy A [DVD]

 Suitable for 15 years and over   DVD
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
Price: £9.00 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Customers buy this item with Never Let Me Go (2010) [DVD] £5.97

Boy A [DVD] + Never Let Me Go (2010) [DVD]
Price For Both: £14.97

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Product details

  • Format: PAL
  • Language English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.78:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 15
  • Studio: Optimum Home Releasing
  • DVD Release Date: 8 Feb 2010
  • Run Time: 102 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B002VD5S1U
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 8,950 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
The death of a child is always shocking on screen. Back in 1931, audiences watching the horror masterpiece Frankenstein sat in shock as the monster threw a young girl into the lake, drowning her. Watching the film now, it still maintains its shock value. John Carpenter's excellent 1976 film Assault On Precinct 13 sees a heartless thug remorselessly shoot a young girl in a brutal scene that I couldn't believe when I saw it. It's difficult and risky portraying the death of a child that ultimately represents the innocence that we all see disappear as we grow older. However, one thing that is rarely even attempted on screen is to follow the killer of a child as a main protagonist. Fritz Lang tried and ultimately succeeded in M, one of the greatest films ever made. That was back in 1931, and it's rarely been tried since.

Boy A stars Andrew Garfield as Eric Wilson, a young man recently released from prison, getting ready to start a new life under the new identity of Jack Burridge. Helped to re-locate and ultimately settle in his new surroundings is Jack's rehabilitation worker Terry (played by the ever-reliable Peter Mullan), who treats Jack almost as a son, having been with him from his troubled beginnings. Finding a new job and making friends at work, he becomes romantically involved with receptionist Michelle (Katie Lyons) and looks like he is slowly being accepted back into society. But Jack is hiding a dark secret from his past, and were this truth ever to be discovered, it would mean the end to his new life and the possibility of a lynch-mob reaction. His childhood is revealed in flashbacks, as he falls in with Philip (Taylor Doherty) at school and begin a strange friendship which ultimately ends in tragedy for both of them.

Boy A's main strength is its refusal to take a moral stance. It just tells the story of a mentally scarred young man who made a terrible decision early in his life that has had an irreversible impact on the rest of it. Garfield is terrific as an almost child-like adult struggling with the need to grow up quickly and face a strange and often hostile world. When he begins his awkward romance with Michelle, his character appears to almost feel guilty about allowing himself to enjoy it, with knowledge of what he's done and the possibility that the truth may be revealed. In a powerful scene, while Jack and Terry are having a drink in a pub, Jack discusses the fate of Philip in prison and wonders why he has been allowed to have a second chance. Garfield is outstanding as I mentioned before, earning a BAFTA for his performance back in 2008. He has come far since this and will play Spider-Man in the upcoming re- imagining of the comic-book hero.

The film has invited comparisons to the infamous 1993 James Bulgar case, in which two youths Robert Thompson and Jon Venables tortured and horrifically murdered the 2-year old child in Liverpool. For an incident that saw one of the most vicious public outcries in British history, the film has taken a massive risk not to stir up a similar controversy. Thankfully, everything in the film is sensitively done, taking time to show the backstory of the main character up to the incident. It also doesn't sugar-coat it either, building up with an almost uncomfortable intensity that tastefully doesn't linger. It also poses some important questions about the legal system, trial-by-media, and how old a person should be before they can take responsibility for their actions. It attempts to answer none of course, letting the film provoke discussion.

It's a fascinating, sad, funny, tragic and unsettling film that is well handled by director John Crowley, and strongly performed by the cast. If only more films would have the balls to tackle such a sensitive subject. Superb.

(...)
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19 of 22 people found the following review helpful
By Son of Nietzsche TOP 1000 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:DVD
Adapted from the novel by Jonathan Trigell, director John Crowley's British film, BOY A tells the story of 'Jack', a young male finally released from prison for a killing committed with a friend when they were both young. With the assistance of Terry, a (plausibly smug) denizen of the mental health industry, 20-something Jack is established with a whole new identity. Inevitably shy and socially-awkward after spending most of his life under overt institutionalized discipline, Jack struggles to adjust to a modern world that he has never really known, gradually easing into his first job, making friends, and the tentative first steps with a girlfriend.

The story of Jack's past is told through the mechanism of his occasional, tortured flashbacks. As Jack's relationship with his girlfriend intensifies, he wants to disclose his history to her, but is dissuaded by his counsellor Terry, and by the actions of tabloid-mentality vigilantes, who have learned of his release and seek to track him down. Tension mounts palpably as we await the inevitable - the revelation of Jack's past identity - and the shattering consequences for the world that he has so painfully built.

BOY A gives the primary focus of its attention to Jack's present; the initial process of his adjustment is handled with warmth and evokes viewer empathy as he encounters facets of daily-life completely foreign to him after his long years of incarceration. A stranger in a strange land. The past killing is only briefly revealed, and in sketchy detail - which is fortunate, not only because the film's clear emphasis is on who Jack is now, but because the few revelations which we are fed are far and away the weakest element of the film (as the point where the screenplay promulgates the medico-juridical compulsion to account for 'character' through childhood events). Happily, these elements can be ignored for the most part, since thematically the central problematic contemplates the constructed notion of "the dangerous individual", and the application of this psychiatric invention to the all-too-human figure of Jack. The film's unifying thread thus opposes Terry's frequent assertions that Jack has the right to leave his past behind him, versus the lamentably-prevalent bourgeois 'morality' ("think of the children") of the torch-wielding villagers baying for Jack's blood.

A strong soundtrack accompanies the occasionally-indistinct dialogue, and Andrew Garfield as Jack turns in a truly outstanding and authentic début performance. Despite some weak moments, BOY A is a carefully-constructed, powerful drama, and should provoke long-overdue discussion of the harmfulness of our medico-juridical system, along with a questioning of the 19th century mythology of 'The Monster' that is so desperately clung to by contemporary societies. Well worth viewing.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Mesmerising 17 Jan 2012
Format:DVD
This film is worth seeing for Andrew garfields fragile and yet charming performance alone. Add to that a well written story about a controversial subject matter and your on to a winner! Now what the hell are you doing reading reviews buy it!
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