Los Angeles Times

He’s all fired up to wreak some havoc

- — Noel Murray

Writer-director-editor Joseph Martin’s edgy crime dramedy “Us and Them” has something to say, but it says it with too much pizzazz. Part of a long tradition of incendiary, punk-influenced British social satires, it will undoubtedl­y resonate with some politicall­y engaged filmgoers, though it’s more a showcase for rising star Jack Roth than a resounding triumph for Martin.

Roth plays Danny, a working-class kid who ropes his mates into an act of extreme civil disobedien­ce. They invade the home of a posh capitalist and spend hours threatenin­g his family, on camera, as a warning to the rich that ordinary British citizens are fed up.

Martin breaks the story into chapters and jumps around in time to provide backstory and footnotes to the moments of eruptive violence. He sets all this to a soundtrack that veers from classical music to the Damned.

The gimmicky structure and style is more distractin­g than effective, and it mostly fails to compensate for an underdevel­oped plot. Martin’s stealing from the right filmmakers — Ritchie, Kubrick, Leigh, Boyle and Wheatley — but he lacks their command.

What he does have is Roth, who’s absolutely riveting, especially once Danny begins to realize that not only has he failed to think through his plan but that he’s also allowed his rage to be exploited. Danny’s more of an idea than a character, but like his father, Tim, Roth already shows a knack for humanizing a thesis statement.

“Us and Them.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 23 minutes. Playing: Monica Film Center, Santa Monica.

 ?? Parkland Pictures ?? DANNY (Jack Roth) fuels working-class anger with punk style. In words of the Damned, neat neat neat.
Parkland Pictures DANNY (Jack Roth) fuels working-class anger with punk style. In words of the Damned, neat neat neat.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States