Human Traffic

1999

Action / Comedy / Music

Plot summary


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Top cast

Andrew Lincoln Photo
Andrew Lincoln as Felix
Richard Coyle Photo
Richard Coyle as Andy
Shaun Parkes Photo
Shaun Parkes as Koop
John Simm Photo
John Simm as Jip
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
865.81 MB
1280*682
English 2.0
R
24 fps
1 hr 39 min
P/S 1 / 3
1.44 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 39 min
P/S 2 / 14

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by littlestewart-0671610 / 10

Never gets old!

I love this movie just as much now, as I did 20 years ago!! Bringing back so many memories!!!!

Reviewed by jboothmillard6 / 10

Human Traffic

If I was going mix two film to describe this inventive film, I would probably say, Trainspotting meets Ali G Indahouse. It is about a hip-hop, dance, drugs, alcohol and smoke filled lifestyle, all with a group of five friends. These friends: Jip (Life on Mars's John Simm),Lulu (Lorraine Pilkington),Koop (The Mummy Returns' Shaun Parkes),Moff (Severance's Danny Dyer) and Nina (Nicola Reynolds) spend a lost weekend clubbing, loving and mixing (with as well) music. It mixes with Trainspotting with a group of friends and involving drugs, and it is like Ali G Indahouse with the hip-hop lifestyle and talking, thinking and acting cool, and possibly Jamaican. Also starring Dean Davies as Lee, Justin Kerrigan as Ziggy Marlon, Jo Brand as Mrs. Reality and Love Actually's Andrew Lincoln as Felix. There is some fantastic use of surrealism about what characters are thinking and want, great camera-work, and of course, fantastic dance and hip-hop music. It was nominated the BAFTA for the Carl Foreman Award for the Most Promising Newcomer for director Justin Kerrigan, and it won the Wales BAFTAs for the Cymru Award Best Camera - Drama, Best Director and Best Drama. Good!

Reviewed by dbdumonteil7 / 10

new hedonism for Justin Kerrigan

Cardiff, Wales. A bunch of 5 mates are deeply bored in this town. There's Jip who works in a clothes shop. Coop, an easy-going DJ. Nina, inseparable from her best friend Lulu and Moff. The week is hell for them and they only wait for one thing: the week-end. At this time, they got out to a nightclub and to the sound of tech no music, they experience different drugs, particularly ecstasy. Then, they usually continue the party to a friend's. At the end of this really good time on Sunday, the feelings are the following ones: tiredness, melancholy, just the memory of a crazy night...

Surfing on the wave of the notorious success of "Trainspotting" (1996),this debut movie written and directed by Justin Kerrigan brings and develops a new variation about the notion of hedonism. It means: how to have fun as much as possible while knowing that you have a shortened lapse of time. Indeed, as I have previously written, for the 5 main characters of the movie, the week is hell and the weekend is the only time they can free themselves and have a wild time without the single pressure (besides, Jip in one sequence talks about the positive aspects of shooting oneself: you are numb, you don't feel any pressure, you are like an astronaut in orbit above the earth. Kerrigan's relentless directorial style expresses very well the spirit of debauchery and care freeness of the 5 protagonists. They only live to take advantage as much as possible of an hedonist week-end. Furthermore, to spice up a little more the festive atmosphere in which his movie bathes, Kerrigan isn't afraid to include dreamlike sequences which represent his characters' fantasy or embarrassments. Then, "Human Traffic" (1999) is also served by a particularly bouncy sound track. The amount? A perfect symbiosis between the sound and the music. At last, this week-end of euphoria enables to shelve momentarily the usual drab image of the popular social classes, British cinema has studied a lot.

Notwithstanding, when a movie (conscientiously or not) exploits the fame of another famous one, it rarely matches the brilliance of its predecessor. "Human Traffic" is in this condition. There's little inventiveness at the level of the narrative structure and the introduction of the characters and one can note down a few useless digressions (Jip who, in the nightclub goes in the manager's office and tells him a cock-and-bull story so as to enable Moff to enter the club but that's no use because the latter succeeds in coming without problems). One can also blame Kerrigan to overlook the dramatic sides that the story could have involved. His movie can also be read as a transition from euphoria to paranoia and the dramatic connotations of this second pole aren't virtually explored. It's a shame! It could have conveyed the following message: even in the happiest moments, there can be something terrible preparing which can flop them. The same remark could also be said when Coop has a fit of jealousy because Nina broaches a guy.

It may not be the last great film of the nineties as it is billed on the DVD cover but "Human Traffic" is to be taken as a good and incisive little movie which conveys with the styles and the fashions of the end of the twentieth century, a will to have fun without ulterior motives and trouble. An ideal movie to start any party or before going to a club.

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