Boy
Review
by Anthony Morris
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Boy
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The year is 1984, the place is New Zealand’s Waihau Bay, and for Boy (James Rolleston) life is good. School
is out for the holidays, his little brother thinks he has magic powers,
and his Grandmother is taking a break for a week, leaving him in charge
of a small army of siblings. Then suddenly his long absent
father Alamein (writer / director Taika Waititi) drives up with the
other two members of his unimpressive bikie "gang", and Boy’s life is
turned on its head.
Waititi’s second film (after the indie comedy Eagle vs Shark) isn’t exactly a coming of age film – it’s smarter and more subtle than that.
For audiences trained to think in Hollywood rhythms, the arrival of
Alamein – who clearly at least likes his kids, but is also just as
clearly mostly there because he buried some money in a nearby paddock
and can’t seem to find it – is a cause for dread. The first ten minutes of Boy
are as funny as anything you’ll see this year, and the return of an
absent dad (fresh out of prison to boot) usually signals darker times
ahead. Instead, Alamein proves to be both a better and a
worse father than expected, the comedy keeps on coming even when events
eventually take on a slightly darker tinge, and the overall impression
is one of a film that’s wholly original and totally charming. That’s
thanks in large part to the utterly natural performances from the kids
and Waititi’s own dorky charisma, and together with a sharp yet daggily
funny script they make Boy a front-runner for comedy of the year. 4.5 out
of 5
Boy
Australian release: 26th August,
2010
Official
Site: Boy
Cast: James Rolleston, Te Aho Aho Eketone-Whitu, Taika Waititi
Director: Taika Waititi
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