Empire (UK)

RED, WHITE AND BLUE

★★★★ OUT 13 DECEMBER (BBC ONE/BBC IPLAYER) CERT UNRATED / 80 MINS

- HANNA FLINT

DIRECTOR Steve Mcqueen

CAST John Boyega, Steve Toussaint, Antonia Thomas, Tyrone Huntley

PLOT In ’80s London, Leroy Logan (Boyega), a research scientist, becomes a police officer to combat racial prejudice within the Met Police. But Logan is pulled between community and duty as his father Kenneth (Toussaint) seeks justice for the police brutality to which he fell victim.

FIVE MOVIES MAKE up Steve Mcqueen’s Small Axe series, and so far two have focused on the treatment of London’s Black communitie­s by the capital’s Metropolit­an Police. But whereas

Mangrove exposes the Force’s institutio­nal racism from the outside through the 1970 trial of nine Black protesters, Red, White And Blue delivers an awe-inspiring internal perspectiv­e via John Boyega’s young police officer, Leroy Logan.

Boyega is no stranger to playing real-life people confronted with police brutality that reeks of racism. He portrayed security guard Melvin Dismukes in Kathryn Bigelow’s 2017

Detroit, set during the 1967 race riots, but while he shone as part of an ensemble, in Mcqueen’s film, co-written by Courttia Newland, he blazes.

The thrum of injustice permeates throughout 1980s London — created by production designer Helen Scott and cinematogr­apher Shabier Kirchner — from Logan as a young boy being stopped and searched outside his school, to the vicious beating his father Kenneth (Steve Toussaint) receives from two racist boys in blue. As with most Black households of the 1980s, there is no love lost for the police, but Logan is a testament to the first-generation Jamaican immigrant parents who raised him, and he wants to set a new standard. Brought up to be smarter, fitter and “more British” than his white British peers, Logan uses his academic success to become a research scientist, but after witnessing the continued violence against his community, he decides to become a police officer to challenge prejudice from within the force.

This, of course, puts him at odds with his father, whose quiet battle to get his day in court is juxtaposed with the gritty intensity of Logan’s police training. As he strives for equality in an institutio­n that breeds hate against people with brown and Black skin, he carries the vitrolic weight of members of his own community who see him as a traitor to his race by wearing a police uniform.

Boyega is magnetic. He delivers as much passion, intelligen­ce and heart as he did through a megaphone at the Black Lives Matter protest in London. He navigates the double consciousn­ess of Logan’s simmering emotions as he switches between dialects to correspond with the impression he wants to make. Toussaint, too, balances quivering rage with subtle vulnerabil­ity. But there is so much tension in what is not said between father and son, officer and commander, white man and Black man, that paints a visceral picture of the Black-british experience, Black masculinit­y, and a society still living with the hangover of colonial prejudice.

Red, White And Blue is a cinematic mirror brilliantl­y designed to reflect the racial injustice of London’s past — but no matter how harrowing the film gets, you will not want to look away.

VERDICT Mcqueen serves up an aweinspiri­ng, visceral reflection of London’s torrid history of racial prejudice and police brutality, while John Boyega gives a career-best performanc­e dripping with power and passion.

 ??  ?? Leroy (John Boyega) attempts to fight the police’s racial prejudice from within.
Leroy (John Boyega) attempts to fight the police’s racial prejudice from within.

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