Broken

2012

Action / Drama / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: OTTO

Director

Top cast

Lily James Photo
Lily James as Older Skunk
Cillian Murphy Photo
Cillian Murphy as Mike Kiernan
Tim Roth Photo
Tim Roth as Archie
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
747.31 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 31 min
P/S 0 / 3
1.43 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 31 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle7 / 10

quirky dark coming-of-age

Emily 'Skunk' Cunningham witnesses Mr. Oswald beating fragile Rick Buckley in his driveway at their cul-de-sac. Oswald found a used condom in his oldest daughter's bed and he forced her to come up with a name. The condom wasn't her's and picking Rick was a lie. Rick is released from jail and he doesn't press charges against Oswald. Rick starts to be a recluse in his parents' home. They are afraid of Oswald and Rick is hospitalized. Skunk's au pair Kasia is dating Mike (Cillian Murphy). Her father Archie (Tim Roth) tries to talk to Oswald but he's a vicious bully and so are the three Oswald girls. Skunk starts her new school. Mike is her teacher and she gets bullied by Sunrise Oswald.

This has a dreamy chipper quality with the darker material. Young Eloise Laurence is a charming lead. Cillian Murphy and Tim Roth are the big names with supporting roles. It's a quirky coming-of-age movie that keeps peppering it with darkness. Skunk is reminiscent of Scout in "To Kill a Mockingbird" in both looks and function. My main reservation is the redemption of Mr. Oswald. It's undeserved and convenient all at the same time.

Reviewed by Prismark105 / 10

A tale of broken Britain

Broken adapted from a novel and directed by Rufus Norris better known for his theatre work. The film is set in a London cul de sac and is a slice of life story with plenty of acknowledgements to the classic novel, 'To kill a Mockingbird.'

Eloise Laurence plays Skunk, a cheery 11 year old tomboy who sees her neighbour (Rory Kinnear) severely beat up another neighbour, a mentally challenged teenager (Robert Emms) who he thinks raped his daughter and made her pregnant. The accusation is false as all of Kinner's daughters are malevolent and rough and its not the only accusation of rape they make in the movie.

Skunk's dad is a kindly lawyer (Tim Roth) who is respected by many of the other neighbours. They have an au pair who is in a relationship with schoolteacher (Cillian Murphy.) Skunk also starts a budding relationship with another boy at the same time she faces bullying at high school and when Emms returns to the estate after his beating still traumatised, events take a nasty turn.

Norris brings the best of his actors as he coaxes both Murphy and Roth back from Hollywood and he definitely gets the most out of the young actors. The script is poor and fights against the film. The Kinnear character should had been thrown in prison for the first beating never mind been allowed to do it again the second time. It does not matter if a traumatized boy does not want to press charges he was in no such state to make a rational decision.

The drama with the on/off relationship with the au pair and the teacher as well as the au-pair later getting close to Skunk's dad was rather humdrum.

What I disliked the most was people getting bullied, beaten up and no effective action being taken against the perpetrators even if witnessed by teachers for example. Of course the title of the film wants to depict a Broken Britain, damaged people who look for those rays of goodness but this film lacks focus and a cutting edge.

Reviewed by gradyharp10 / 10

Cul-de-sac: 'Don't be scared. I just want your goodness.'

For all the horror films that depend on zombies, vampires, werewolves and the like to place a fantasy make believe world before us to frighten us, none is as terrifying as this very realistic, extraordinarily well written, well photographed, well directed and well acted gem from Film Movement. It is a British product (BBC) and seems to have had a minimal response in the theaters. Now more available to the public, hopefully this brilliant work will attract enough attention to place it in the categories for many awards it so justly deserves. But more important, it may expose many people to the tragedies that surround us and are too often unnoticed or misunderstood.

In North London there are three families whose houses form a cul-de-sac: Archie (Tim Roth, never better) is a single father whose wife left him to raise 11 year old insulin dependent, adventuresome tomboy Skunk (Eloise Laurence) and her brother Jed (Bill Milner) and their housekeeper Kasia (Zana Marjanovic); The Oswalds – Bob (Rory Kinnear) is an out of control easily enraged father of three loose and trashy daughters Susan (Rosalie Kosky),Saskia (Faye Daveney) and Sunrise (Martha Bryant); and the Buckleys – Mr. and Mrs. Buckley (Denis Lawson and Clare Burt) and their severely mentally challenged son Rick (Robert Emms). Bob Oswald finds a condom that one of his daughters had been exploring, jumps to the conclusion that Rick has raped his daughter, and beats Rick mercilessly – a sight Skunk witnesses. This cruel error is the first play in the downward spiral of this profoundly sad tale of how these three families interact. There are a few subplots – Kasia is dating a local school teacher Mike (Cillian Murphy) as well as trying to convince Archie to marry her, Skunk is befriended and has her first rocky encounter with a boy named Dillon (George Sargeant) and they find an empty trailer house by the nearby junkyard where massive machines toss old cars around like unwanted bugs, one of the Oswald girl's secret pregnancy ends badly, Rick Buckley is blamed for every odd happening and is institutionalized, Skunk's friendship with Rick involves her in tragic consequences, and more. Every member of each family is broken in some way and the manner in which these pieces of shattered lives influence each other makes for some of the most profoundly moving scenes and themes ever filmed.

The story is based on the novel by Daniel Clay, adapted for the screen by Mark O'Rowe, and Rufus Norris makes his impressive directing debut. The entire cast is first class – this is the first film experience for Eloise Laurence and she is stunning, as are Tim Roth and Cillian Murphy and the rest. For this viewer this is one of the finest movies of the past year, a film so challenging and exquisitely crafted that it should be seen by everyone. Highly Recommended.

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