Los Angeles Times

Crime saga hurt by flawed script

- — Gary Goldstein

It’s easy to see what inspired busy actor Idris Elba to make “Yardie” his feature directing debut. Based on a 1992 cult novel by Victor Headley, the story explores a thread of criminal culture that spans from 1970s Jamaica to 1980s England as told through the eyes of D (for Dennis), a Jamaican gang member (or “yardie”) haunted by the murder of his peace-loving brother in a gang conflict 10 years earlier.

It’s a gritty, evocative tale with a conflicted protagonis­t struggling to survive a risky existence yet also do right for those he cares about. Sounds good, no?

So why isn’t the film better?

Unfortunat­ely, the script by Brock Norman Brock and Martin Stellman loses its way once D (Aml Ameen) leaves Jamaica for London in 1983 to deliver cocaine for crime boss/father figure King Fox (Sheldon Shepherd). The deal goes south and D becomes entwined in the undergroun­d drug and music worlds.

D’s often rash or tenuous choices lead to some ineffectiv­e plotting and, in turn, uneven pacing. His yo-yoing relationsh­ip with Yvonne (Shantol Jackson), the childhood sweetheart he reunites with in London (along with their young daughter), also lacks coherence.

Elba brings care to the film’s performanc­es, period look and musical elements. But the freeze frames, needless voice-over bits and stalled narrative momentum undercut the picture’s potential power and uniqueness. “Yardie.” Not rated. In English with English subtitles to clarify Jamaican and British dialects. Running time: 1 hour, 42 minutes. Playing: In limited release.

 ?? William Richards Rialto Pictures / Studiocana­l ?? AML AMEEN plays a Jamaican gang leader known as D (for Dennis) in Idris Elba’s directoria­l debut.
William Richards Rialto Pictures / Studiocana­l AML AMEEN plays a Jamaican gang leader known as D (for Dennis) in Idris Elba’s directoria­l debut.

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