The Week

Playground

1hr 12mins (15)

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Powerful Belgian film about a child starting at a new school ★★★★

Playground “captures exactly what it feels like to be seven years old and starting a new school, which is another way of saying it’s the most panic-attack-inducing film of the year”, said Robbie Collin in The Daily Telegraph. Many of the events it depicts are “fairly ordinary”; the Belgian film’s power lies in Maya Vanderbequ­e’s “heart-lurchingly plausible” central performanc­e as Nora, a troubled new pupil who must learn to negotiate school life. Vanderbequ­e acts with “the kind of pristine psychologi­cal integrity that would make Daniel Day-Lewis drop his cobbling kit”, and director Laura Wandel capitalise­s on this by making the film mainly from the child’s point of view – so that older pupils “loom” up before her, grown-ups are little more than “disembodie­d legs”, and the din of the schoolyard resembles that of a “war zone”. Owing to a “brief, appropriat­ely frightenin­g moment of child-on-child violence”, Playground has a 15 rating, which is a pity as younger audiences would surely benefit from watching “such a striking depiction of pre-teen life”.

“Sometimes cinema is at its most potent and engrossing when it’s stripped down to the essentials,” said Wendy Ide in The Observer. This “uncomforta­bly powerful” film is a case in point: at little over an hour in length, with lithe, handheld camerawork and no score, it takes a “piercingly insightful” look at the “semi-feral pack dynamic of childhood”, without labouring the point. The “Hobbesian, tooth-and-nail universe of the playground” has seldom been portrayed “so indelibly”, said Tom Shone in The Sunday Times. Occasional­ly, Nora turns to adults for help, but the film shows she’s on her own; as its French title (Un Monde) suggests, school is “a world unto itself. A beautiful film.”

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