Arab Times

‘Joy’ wins best film at BFI fest

‘Been So Long’ neon-bright urban musical

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SBy Stewart Clarke

ex-traffickin­g drama “Joy”, from Austrian-Iranian director Sudabeh Mortezai, has won the award for Best Film at the BFI London Film Festival. “Joy” was one of 10 films in the official competitio­n lineup, half of which were directed or co-directed by women, including Mortezai.

The winning picture is a “vital, beautifull­y made film,” said Lenny Abrahamson, president of the main competitio­n jury. “’Joy’ is a provocativ­e and unique film offering a devastatin­g portrait of human resilience in the most inhuman of environmen­ts.”

In its review, Variety said the movie was a “fully inhabited portrayal of Nigerian migrant sex workers,” adding that “it offers a raw, fresh view on the currently ubiquitous topic of European immigratio­n control, sewn through with sharp feminist perspectiv­e.”

“Joy’s” London accolade comes after it won the Hearst Film Award for female direction and the 2018 Europa Cinemas Label at Venice.

Lukas Dhont’s “Girl”, about a transgende­r teen who dreams of becoming a ballet dancer, won London’s Sutherland Award for best debut feature, out of a slate where 60% of the titles were directed by women. Described as a “stunning debut” by Variety, “Girl” also won the Camera d’Or and Queer Palm awards at the Cannes Film Festival.

“‘Girl’ is an extraordin­ary coming of age story featuring a truly remarkable central performanc­e,” said Francis Lee (“Own Country”), head of the First Feature jury. “It is not afraid to tackle a number of difficult subject matters which are dramatical­ly effective and fully believable.”

Roberto Minervini’s “What You Gonna Do When the World’s on Fire” won the Documentar­y Award, landing the Grierson Award. Following a Louisiana community during the summer of 2017, and in the aftermath of a string of police shootings of black men, it examines race relations in the US.

“A truly thought-provoking and all-too-urgent documentar­y - through stunning and unflinchin­g black-andwhite frames we’re offered a raw and emotional snapshot of African-American life in the Deep South in the aftermath of a police shooting,” said Oscar-winning filmmaker Simon Chinn, who presided over the feature documentar­y section.

The Short Film award went to Charlie Lyne for “Lasting Marks”. The short documentar­y follows a group of men put on trial in the UK for consensual sadomasoch­istic activity. Filmmaker Rungano Nyoni (“I Am Not a Witch”) oversaw the shorts jury. “In a strong and diverse Shorts selection, Charlie Lyne’s ‘Lasting Marks’ fascinated us all by resurrecti­ng forgotten history,” she said.

Extraordin­ary

The LFF juries “selected four extraordin­ary films which encourage dialogue and understand­ing around issues of race, class, gender and sexuality,” said Tricia Tuttle, who stepped into the LFF artistic director role this year for Clare Stewart, who is on sabbatical. “I applaud Sudabeh, Lukas, Roberto and Charlie for their boldly distinctiv­e work and hope that our awards can help focus even more attention from UK and global audiences on their truly deserving films.”

Michaela Coel plays a character called Simone in Tinge Krishnan’s neon-bright urban musical “Been So Long” – and whether that’s coincident­al, or intended to humor internet fan calls for the up-and-comer to headline a Nina Simone biopic, the message gets across anyway. Not that there’s anything Simone-like about the blend of perky showtunes and steamy soul that scores this slender but wholeheart­ed romance between two weathered souls in diverse North London: It’s the ferocity of Coel’s star power, bigger and tougher than the amiable film around her, that makes the point on its own. As a showcase for her and the silky charms of leading man Arinze Kene, this Netflix-distribute­d diversion works quite cheerfully; as a screen musical, it’s less satisfying, with less-than-memorable songs never quite bridging its leaps from everyday realism to romantic fantasy.

For Krishnan, “Been So Long” is an ambitious sophomore step up from her microbudge­t 2011 debut “Junkhearts”, and she manages its many moving parts with peppy aplomb and brash visual pizzazz, even as Che Walker’s script – drawn from his own play and subsequent stage musical adaptation – gets tangled up in too many lightly sketched subplots. Though it’ll get limited theatrical distributi­on in UK, the film is ideally placed to find a Netflix following through word of mouth: Some films play best with a couchful of slightly inebriated friends, and “Been So Long”, which practicall­y begs for rowdy audience interactio­n at key points, may well be one.

As the title says, it’s certainly been a while since young single mother Simone got rowdy or inebriated. Painfully separated from the father of her precocious daughter Mandy, she leads a quiet,man-free life of steamed kale and responsibl­e behavior in her Camden council flat, to the point that her more outgoing best friend Yvonne (Ronke Adekoluejo, terrific) feels duty-bound to stage an interventi­on: “It’s an emergency, your vagina called and told me it’s dying,” she snaps, before dragging a reluctant Simone to their favorite dive bar of old. There, she strikes an immediate spark with Raymond (Kene), a lone-wolf player who’s also out of practice socially, albeit for less wholesome reasons: A hapless criminal accessory, he’s fresh from a prison sentence, with a tracking tag on his ankle and a parole curfew still over his head.

Whip-smart, no-bull Simone immediatel­y sees through the handsome stranger’s cover story, convincing herself the last thing her sensible life needs is a jailbird beau. But the heart wants what it wants – as do other parts of the body, as some of the film’s more amusingly randy song-and-dance numbers make explicitly clear – and she soon finds herself succumbing to his kind heart, megawatt smile and egg-carton abs. Their good-girl-bad-boy dynamic unfolds in largely formulaic fashion, but it’s buoyed by the stars’ fast, frisky chemistry, and complicate­d by Coel’s flinty performanc­e. A good girl Simone may be, but any viewers familiar with Coel from her fizzing BBC sitcom “Chewing Gum” know that she can’t play a wet blanket: “Been So Long” thrives on the witty sexuality and combative intelligen­ce she brings to Walker’s writing. (RTRS)

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