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Showing 1 - 6 of 6 matches in All Departments
Menhaj Huda, director of the 2006 film 'Kidulthood', writes and directs this coming-of-age drama about a young British-Asian man caught in a culture clash. Ash (James Floyd) keeps his head down during the week, adhering to his family's strict moral codes and working for the family business. But as the weekend comes around he is let loose into the very different world of London's club scene, where he pursues his long-held dream of becoming a DJ.
A group of inner city teens are hunted down by a crazed psychopath, in this slasher horror from director Menhaj Huda. Although he's determined to change his life around now that his first love Jemma (Sophie Stuckey) is pregnant, recently released con Lloyd (Jacob Anderson) soon finds himself running with his old mates again. Accepting their offer of cash and drugs, he agrees to help them break into the now derelict tower block where they used to live as kids and erect an aerial for their pirate radio station. With Lloyd's friends deciding to celebrate his release at the same time, the event soon turns into a party with the group popping pills like there's no tomorrow. But when Jenna mysteriously disappears, the resulting search of the labyrinthine tower quickly turns into a bloodbath, as one by one the friends are targetted by a blade-wielding psychopath.
Hard-hitting British urban drama about disaffected youth. Given the day off school after a girl in their class commits suicide, a group of troubled 15-year-olds spend the day wandering the streets of London taking drugs, getting in fights, indulging in under-age sex, and moving ever closer to a gun crime that will change their lives. Written by and starring Noel Clarke, and directed by Manhaj Huda.
Triple bill of hard-hitting British dramas written by and starring Noel Clarke. 'Kidulthood' (2006) follows a group of troubled 15-year-olds as they are given the day off school after a girl in their class commits suicide. Spending the day wandering the streets of London taking drugs, getting into fights, and indulging in underage sex, the gang slip ever further into a life of crime. In 'Adulthood' (2008), six years after killing his gang rival, Sam Peel (Clarke) is released from prison. He is soon confronted by those he hurt before his incarceration. Some have carried on with their lives, while others still have to deal with the repercussions of Sam's actions that fateful night. As he struggles to deal with his feelings of guilt, Sam soon finds his life threatened by a group of youths out for revenge. Finally, in 'Brotherhood' (2016), still struggling to come to terms with the events that saw him jailed for murder, Sam Peel again finds himself the target of local youths looking to get even. After realising he must face his tormentors head-on if he is to move on with his life, Peel seeks help from old friends in an attempt to finally break free from a chequered past that continues to haunt him.
British gangster thriller depicting events surrounding the Essex drugs war in the mid-1990s. The film charts the ever-increasing drug shipments, gangland politics and extreme violence that culminated in the brutal murder of three gangsters - Tony Tucker (Terry Stone), Patrick Tate (Tamer Hassan) and Craig Rolfe (Neil Maskell) - in their Range Rover in Rettendon in 1995.
British drama in which Jerome Davies (Adam Deacon) has beaten the odds to escape the council estate where he grew up and carve out a new life for himself as a professional footballer. However, a series of encounters with family and friends from the estate sends his privileged new life spinning off course. Footballing legend Geoff Hurst makes a guest appearance.
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