The Guardian (USA)

Savage review – moving New Zealand streetgang saga

- Phil Hoad

A pulse of vulnerabil­ity beats at the heart of Sam Kelly’s outwardly imposing but unexpected­ly touching debut feature. Across three decades, it charts the punk’s progress of young New Zealander Danny into copiously tattooed street-gang life. After being sent to borstal in the 1960s for stealing food and brutalised there, he befriends a Māori boy called Moses. The two later form a gang, the Savages – named to nihilistic­ally expose society’s true core – but torn by his loyalty to his birth family, Danny’s position is never secure. By the 80s, Danny has become “Damage”, a hulking, live-wire enforcer who wears his allegiance­s on his face in a bluish nose guard of gang-crest ink.

Kelly occasional­ly gives in to the odd crime-drama mannerism, like the Savages swaggering out, Reservoir Dogs-style, for the first time. But he makes the smart choice of never being distracted from the emotional cost of holding your own in this self-inflicted prison of testostero­ne. Early on, Damage botches a hook-up with a banker’s daughter keen on a bit of rough because he can’t handle surrenderi­ng control. Seen across the decades, violence clearly has its roots in a pain and shame whose consequenc­es won’t stop radiating. Kelly has a knack of putting these ideas across with light lyrical concision, like the row of dominoes that gets the childhood section underway.

Taking a young “prospect” under his wing finally presents Damage with an opportunit­y to break the circle. Former Home and Away actor Jake Ryan, possessing similar solemn antipodean tones to Russell Crowe, has the required physical presence to play Damage; his character’s straight-arrow MO not only contrasts nicely with his gang-sign-brandishin­g, mostly Māori confrères, but also with interestin­gly nervy work by James Matamua as his less assured teenage self. Outcast by society, Damage’s conflicted feelings make him an outcast in his own gang – and finally threaten him with permanent exile from his own childhood innocence. A moving character study with bruising moral weight.

• Savage is in cinemas on 11 September.

 ??  ?? Jake Ryan in Savage.
Jake Ryan in Savage.

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