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‘Urchin' Review: Harris Dickinson's Knockout Directorial Debut Creates High Art From A Low, Sad Life

‘Urchin' Review: Harris Dickinson's Knockout Directorial Debut Creates High Art From A Low, Sad Life

Yahoo20-05-2025
No good deed goes unpunished in Urchin, a London-set character study that shows so much sophisticated and worldly wisdom it's hard to believe that its writer, director and co-star is only 28 years old. Built around a charismatic performance from Frank Dillane, best known for his role as recovering heroin addict Nick Clark in AMC's Fear the Walking Dead, Harris Dickinson's remarkable feature debut takes the tropes of socially conscious British cinema and fashions a deceptively nuanced cautionary tale that isn't so much about the failings of that society as our own personal capacity for self-destruction.
At the center of the drama is Michael (Dillane), who we find sleeping rough, woken up by city noise and the earnest entreaties of a largely ignored street preacher. In a subtle moment that tells you exactly who he is, Michael rudely pushes past her, then sets about his day. After charging his phone, begging for change and socializing at a soup kitchen, he realizes that his wallet has gone missing, stolen by his junkie friend Nathan (Dickinson). Dirty, scruffy and scarily intense, Michael accosts horrified passers-by to ask if they've seen him. 'He's wearing blue trousers and there's blood on his face,' he says, and they react exactly as you think they might, and probably would yourself.
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Filmed in covert (improvised?) documentary-style situations, Michael is all but invisible thus far, and his interactions with the public feel so real that it's actually quite jarring when the film makes an abrupt segue from its loose so-far, so-verité aesthetic to tight drama with the film's shocking defining incident. After Michael finds Nathan outside a busy office building, a confrontation ensues, drawing in a good Samaritan, Simon, who diffuses the tension and offers to buy Michael lunch. In lieu of a thank-you, Michael waits until his benefactor's guard is down, assaults him, then steals his watch and pawns it.
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Michael's ensuing eight-month prison sentence is handled in the most extraordinary way; as he showers, naked and vulnerable, the camera pans down to follow the falling water as it circles the drain then goes down, down and even further down, to the darkest depths of the ocean, even. And then, before you know it, Michael is out of captivity and back in society, encouraged by sympathetic social worker Nadia, who finds him a hostel, and employed by Franco, the kind-hearted manager of a hotel that we hear described by its guests as 'a shithole,' who offers him work as a prep cook in his kitchen.
This is where the film gets interesting. Can Michael hold the job down after living so long in the margins? He seems to want to try, committing to getting himself sober and boasting to Nadia of an alcohol-free night doing karaoke with a couple of female workmates, joining in as they sing the cheesy but emotional 'Whole Again' by ill-starred '90s British girl group Atomic Kitten. He even listens to a self-help CD, and its holistic gibberish seems to be taking hold as he tries to take control of his new freedom.
In fact, he becomes so comfortable that he agrees to a conciliatory meeting with his victim, Simon, who bears no malice but, more damagingly, articulates the question Michael has been running away from all these years: Why did he do it? The scene is uncomfortable and oddly brief; unusually for an actor-director, Dickinson doesn't go in for showy scenes and leaves a lot to be inferred. But the things he leaves out are every bit as powerful as the things he leaves in; this meeting triggers a reaction in Michael, a voracious, cancerous, near-Cronenbergian self-loathing that devours his self-esteem.
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This kind of unraveling isn't that new in the pantheon of British kitchen-sink dramas, but what is quite startling is the film's clear-eyed, unsentimental portrayal of Michael as the author of his own tragedy. Dillane is quite the revelation in this respect; his backstory is lightly sketched, aside from a few references to his adoptive parents, but somehow it's all there. With his incongruous RP accent and oddly naive façade, he's quite likely posher than he lets on, but there's a sense that his street smarts have long since obliterated that past, that identity. Toward the end, he watches, with detachment, as a snake devours a mouse. Survival is his game, an addict's mindset described by author William S. Burroughs as the algebra of need ('The more absolute the need, the more predictable the behavior becomes until it is mathematically certain').
This might seem like cold right-wing rhetoric in today's charity-averse world, but Dickinson's film is more complex than that. It doesn't tell us to help the needy; it wants us to see that sometimes the needy can't and won't accept that help. Likewise, Urchin doesn't offer any answers, nor does it try, but it does open up a conversation about the people who fall through the cracks. Dillane is key here, whether pacing the streets in tacky charity-shop gear or invading people's spaces with his spidery, unwanted attention. It's to the credit of both that the film lands its ending, a strangely poetic but unexpectedly moving knockout. A vision of purgatory, perhaps, or an X-ray of a man who somehow lost his soul.
Title: UrchinFestival: Cannes (Un Certain Regard)Director-screenwriter: Harris DickinsonCast: Frank Dillane, Megan Northam, Amr Waked, Karyna Khymchuk, Shonagh MarieSales agent: CharadesRunning time: 1 hr 39 min
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Whoa, baby! The real story behind the adorable star of 'Fantastic Four'
Whoa, baby! The real story behind the adorable star of 'Fantastic Four'

USA Today

time20 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Whoa, baby! The real story behind the adorable star of 'Fantastic Four'

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Lynette Howell Taylor elected new president of the motion picture academy
Lynette Howell Taylor elected new president of the motion picture academy

Los Angeles Times

timean hour ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Lynette Howell Taylor elected new president of the motion picture academy

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‘Monty Python' star Michael Palin, 82, details his will plans after losing wife: ‘I do think about death'
‘Monty Python' star Michael Palin, 82, details his will plans after losing wife: ‘I do think about death'

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

‘Monty Python' star Michael Palin, 82, details his will plans after losing wife: ‘I do think about death'

Sir Michael Palin has plans in place for his inevitable death. The 82-year-old star of the British comedy troupe Monty Python revealed that he's organized his will and instructed his loved ones on what to do when he dies following his wife's passing in 2023. Speaking on the podcast 'On the Marie Curie Couch,' Palin got real about his end-of-life arrangements, noting that losing his significant other has helped his family be more open about the end. 15 Michael Palin attends the world premiere of the 'Ocean with David Attenborough' documentary. REUTERS 'I do think about death, and the family are rather wonderful about it: 'Have you made a will? Can I be in your will?'' the English comedian shared on Wednesday's episode of the podcast 'On the Marie Curie Couch.' 'I've made my will and all that. My family, my children, know where to find what they need to find should I die,' he added. Palin made sure to note that he still finds the humor in his demise by revealing each of his three children — Thomas, 56, William, 54, and Rachel, 50 — has his passwords 'in case I get run over by a bus.' 15 Michael Palin lost his wife of over 50 years in 2023. JA / BACKGRID 15 The comedian noted that his wife's death has made his family more open about his last years. AFP/Getty Images The actor and writer lost his wife, Helen Gibbins, in 2023 to chronic kidney disease. Palin, himself, has also gone through his own health battle. In 2019, he underwent heart surgery to repair a mitral valve and shared how the experience made him more aware of his body. 'However fit you are, anything might happen,' Palin explained on the podcast. 'But I don't dwell on mortality. I dwell on life.' 15 Actor/Writer John Cleese, actress Jamie Lee Curtis, writer Michael Palin and wife Helen Gibbins attend 'A Fish Called Wanda' in 1988. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images 15 John Cleese, Michael Palin and Graham Chapman in 'Life of Brian.' ©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection 15 Michael Palin in the 1979 flick 'The Life of Brian.' ©Orion Pictures Corp/Courtesy Everett Collection While he stays active with work, the comedian noted that at 82, he's older than any of his other male relatives in the last 200 years. However, he still feels his age at times. 'I kid myself that I'm going to be alright, and yet I know that I won't because you feel tired at certain times. You're slightly unsteady as you get out of bed, and you think, what's happening? Well, the old car's getting a bit rusty,' the star shared. 15 Michael Palin and Helen Gibbins in London on January 28, 1997. Mirrorpix via Getty Images 15 Michael Palin, Eric Idle and Carol Cleveland in Monty Python's 'The Meaning of Life.' ©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection Palin also said that undergoing heart surgery 'saved my life, really.' He explained: 'And so I've been through that, which I think is quite important – to know that your body is vulnerable. And the older you get, the more vulnerable it is.' The legendary funnyman, who was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 2019, opened up about his wife's death during the interview, too. 15 Rear from left: Michael Palin, Eric Idle, front from left: Graham Chapman as King Arthur, Terry Jones in 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail.' Courtesy Everett Collection 15 Terry Gilliam, Michael Palin, John Cleese, Eric Idle, John Oliver, and Terry Jones pose for a photo backstage at the 'Monty Python And The Holy Grail' special screening in 2015. Stephen Lovekin 15 Eric Idle, Graham Chapman, Michael Palin, John Cleese, Terry Jones, Terry Gilliam in 1971. The pair wed in 1966 and were married for 57 years when she passed away two years ago. Palin admitted, 'There was a time when I didn't think it was going to get better. I thought, gosh, it's just going to be poignant days. I'm going to break into tears every now and then.' However, he shared, 'It does get better and it does adjust. And after two years now I feel I could think of Helen. I'm surrounded by her anyway. I've got photos. 15 Another image of John Cleese, actress Jamie Lee Curtis, Michael Palin and Helen Gibbins at 'A Fish Called Wanda' premiere. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images 'I haven't got rid of anything to do with her. The family embody what she was to them and that's all made it much, much easier.' Calling losing the love of his life 'a sucker punch,' Palin said no one can predict the future. 'You absolutely don't know,' he reflected. 'You just don't know what's going to happen or how you're going to feel or how you're going to react.' 15 Eric Idle, John Cleese and Michael Palin in 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail.' Python Pictures. Courtesy: Everett Collection. 15 Michael Palin, Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Eric Idle, Terry Jones in 'Monty Python's Flying Circus.' When asked how he'd like to be remembered in life, Palin replied, 'I don't want to feel that I've been exalted on any sort of pinnacle in any shape or form.' He credited his late wife for keeping his ego in check. 'Helen was very strong on that… She was obviously pleased that I had been successful at certain things, but didn't go on about it a lot. She was far more interested in whether I was going to be able to mend the tyre on the car,' he said. Palin shared a silly example of their marriage dynamic, reminiscing about calling her from 12,000 feet in the air while filming in Tibet. 15 The Monty Python Troupe (1969) Bottom Row (l to r): Terry Jones, John Cleese, Michael Palin Top Row (l to r): Graham Chapman, Eric Idle, Terry Gilliam. 'I remember ringing up from the middle of the Tibetan Plateau,' he said. 'And I'm saying, 'Guess where I am?' She says, 'Well, I don't care where you are. Where's the plumber's number? The bathroom boiler's gone and it's making a terrible hissing noise.'' He noted that by the end of their conversation, 'I hadn't told her anything about the magnificent landscape… So there we are. That's sort of what life is, and I think that's what death is as well.'

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