Peterman

2014

Action / Crime / Drama / Thriller

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Joe Cole Photo
Joe Cole as Johnny
Peter Bowles Photo
Peter Bowles as Old Boy
Phil Davis Photo
Phil Davis as Grandad
Adam Nagaitis Photo
Adam Nagaitis as Dave
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
713.59 MB
1280*682
English 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 31 min
P/S ...
1.37 GB
1920*1024
English 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 31 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Gorgo338 / 10

True British grit, I liked it.

My first review. A disclaimer: I like most movies I see; I fall into the story and get lost, and I am very willing to suspend disbelief. Bad acting distracts me more than anything and I did not see that in this movie. I saw: good actors, gritty men, tough characters, a guy put into an impossible situation, suspense, violence and interpersonal relationships between family members and between violent and dishonest men. Hard men, career gangsters. A young man's life on the line, in a no- win situation, held prisoner by the bad guys and ordered to crack a safe, OR ELSE. And perhaps he will get the "or else" anyway. I give it an eight. I apologize that I am not as good a reviewer as most of you other folks who post on this site.

Reviewed by davidvmcgillivray-24-9058116 / 10

That rarity, the above average British gangster drama

This is substantially better than ninety per cent of the British gangster pictures shown on the TV station London Live, that repository of films that can't get screenings anywhere else. It's written and directed with flair by Andy Bloom and Mark Abraham respectively; and although, as another reviewer has pointed out, it owes a debt to Tarantino, it's no slavish imitation. Joe Cole is convincing as a heroin addict required to crack open a safe at a farmhouse where rival gangsters are soon at each other's throats. Dialogue is to the point and unaffected and it's no surprise that, despite their inexperience, Bloom and Abraham were able to secure a distinguished cast including Peter Bowles and Alison Steadman in cameos. Film doesn't outstay its welcome but would have been even more effective without the scenes of Cole talking to the ghost of his grandfather, a nothing part for the ubiquitous Phil Davis. But all in all a commendable effort that makes us look forward to whatever these new film-makers may try next.

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