Nowhere Boy English Drama, Biography Movie 2010
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Cast and Crew
Cast: Aaron Johnson, Kristin Scott Thomas,
Thomas Sangster, David Morrissey,
Anne-Marie Duff, Josh Bolt
Director: Sam Taylor Wood
Writers: Julia Baird (memoir),
Matt Greenhalgh (screenplay)
RunTime: 1 hr 38 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: NC-16
Genre: Drama/Biography
Country:UK | Canada
Language:English
Opening Day: 23 September 2010
In Select Theatres: 15 Oct /2010
Synopsis:
Watch Nowhere Boy Online Free Movie Trailer and Nowhere Boy trailer watch online Free Movie wallpaper Watch full Movie Online English movie online Hollywood movie online Comedy movie Romantic movie online movie movie movie review movie story free Nowhere Boy English Hollywood Film The film Directed by Sam Taylor Wood .Imagine… John Lennon’s childhood. Liverpool 1955: a smart and troubled fifteen year-old is hungry for experience. In a family full of secrets, two incredible women clash over John: Mimi, the buttoned-up Aunt who raised him, and Julia, the prodigal mother. Yearning for a normal family, John escapes into the new and exciting world of rock n’ roll where his fledgling genius finds a kindred spirit in the teenage Paul McCartney. Just as John begins his new life, tragedy strikes. But a resilient young man finds his voice – and an icon explodes into the world.
Movie Review :
Period drama has long been a forte of the British cinema; prior to this one there had already been at least three excellent examples from 2009; “Young Victoria”, “Dorian Grey” and “An Education”. Traditional British costume drama has concentrated on the Victorian era and early twentieth century (roughly speaking 1837-1945), but Nowhere Boy, like “An Education”, is set at a rather later period, in this case the late fifties.
The film is about the adolescence of John Lennon, while he was at school and art college in Liverpool. Unlike his three fellow Beatles, who were all from working-class backgrounds, Lennon grew up in middle-class suburbia with his Aunt Mimi and Uncle George, who had raised him since he was five. He was the son of Mimi’s younger sister Julia by her husband Alf Lennon (referred to in the film as “Fred”), but the marriage was not a success, and after Julia began a relationship with another man, Mimi took care of the youngster, then five years old. Julia did not reappear in Lennon’s life until his teenage years when a cousin informed him that, contrary to what he had previously thought, she was still living in Liverpool, only a short walk from his home.
The film focuses on the influence these two very different women had on Lennon’s early life. Although they were sisters, they had wildly contrasting personalities. Julia was a bohemian extrovert, liberal in her social views and keen to foster her son’s musical and artistic talents. Mimi (actually christened Mary Elizabeth) may have shared a nickname with the heroine of “La Boheme”, but there was nothing bohemian about her. She was a strict disciplinarian who initially had little sympathy with John’s musical aspirations and insisted that he get a “proper job”, although eventually she gave in and agreed to buy him a guitar.
The film also charts Lennon’s musical development, including his first meetings with Paul McCartney and George Harrison (Ringo, of course, did not come onto the scene until a few years later) and the birth of The Quarrymen, the band which was later to become The Beatles. There is a vivid picture of the British music scene in the late fifties, a time when trad jazz and rock-and-roll seemed to be competing to become the music of the future. There was also a curious British musical form, skiffle (actually a revival of an earlier American variety of jazz) which was influential at the time; The Quarrymen started out as a skiffle band.
The film also captures the look of the period; although the late fifties were a time of increasing material prosperity, there was much about British life which had a drab feel about it, especially the clothes and the interior decoration schemes. There is a contrast brought out between Mimi’s house, decorated in various shades of brown and cream, and the brighter colours of Julia’s which look forward to the more garish tastes that were to predominate in the sixties. (I remember growing up in a house where the living-room combined dark green wallpaper with a bright orange carpet- hideous today, but unexceptional at the time).
It was not so long ago that Kristin Scott Thomas was playing romantic heroines in films like “The English Patient”; today, casting directors seem to see her as a middle-aged battleaxe in roles like Veronica Whittaker in “Easy Virtue”. Aunt Mimi at first seems like the bourgeois equivalent of the aristocratic Veronica, although she later shows that there is a gentler, more caring, side to her nature. (If Veronica Whittaker ever had a gentler side she kept it well-hidden, even from herself). Scott Thomas is even better here than she was in “Easy Virtue”, because the role she is playing is more complex. Anne-Marie Duff is also very good as Julia and Aaron Johnson as Lennon seems like a young star in the making. Johnson is perhaps rather more handsome than Lennon was in real life, but he is able to convey a real sense of what he must have been like, in part a rebellious tearaway whose idea of fun is going for a ride on the roof of a bus, part emotionally vulnerable youngster torn between loyalty to his carefree, fun-loving mother and to his aunt, the woman who had cared for him since he was very young. The title “Nowhere Boy” is not just a play on the title of one of Lennon’s best-known songs; it is also indicative of John’s state of mind as he tries to reconcile these two influences on his life. Like his “Nowhere Man”, he “Knows not where he’s going to”.
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