The Week

Ali and Ava

1hr 34mins (15)

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A gritty yet uplifting love story set in Bradford

★★★★

In writer-director Clio Barnard’s Bradford-set love story, Adeel Akhtar plays Ali, a DJ turned landlord who spends his days “flitting around” an impoverish­ed local estate collecting rent from his tenants, but also – because this is not a film by Ken Loach – fixing their kitchen cabinets, said Kevin Maher in The Times. Ali even drives his tenants’ children to school, if he is not too busy raving alone in a car park. When he forms a bond with widowed teaching assistant Ava (Claire Rushbrook), it seems superficia­lly impossible. Although Ali’s marriage to his wife (Ellora Torchia) has broken down, they still live together and they haven’t told his British-Pakistani family. Meanwhile, Ava’s irrational­ly angry son (Shaun Thomas) is appalled by her attraction to Ali. But while racism is never far from the surface, Barnard does not dwell on bigotry or violence: her film is ultimately optimistic.

It is not entirely sunny, said Beth Webb in Empire; on the contrary, there are moments when it seems needlessly bleak. But it finds a “startling, exuberant” beauty in the couple’s willingnes­s to broaden their cultural horizons, and in their shared love of music. This is a charming movie, aided by a chemistry between Akhtar and Rushbrook that feels effortless and “utterly captivatin­g”. More celebrator­y than Barnard’s 2013 film The Selfish Giant, but with some of its “poetic grit”, Ali and

Ava is an “ode to the beauty of Bradford, and the indomitabi­lity of its inhabitant­s”, said Mark Kermode in The Observer. Based on real-life characters, it “uses the transcende­nt power of song to turn a streetwise tale into a diegetic musical, with genuinely surprising results”.

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