Monday 16 May 2016

Review: We Still Kill the Old Way (18) #MonsterMondays 35


Welcome to Monster Mondays 35, and today I am reviewing a film I saw last night because it fits perfectly with the theme.

Review: We Still Kill the Old Way

Cast:
Ian Ogilvy ... Richie
Alison Doody ... Susan Taylor
Christopher Ellison ... Roy
Danny-Boy Hatchard ... Aaron
Lysette Anthony ... Lizzie Davis
James Cosmo ... Arthur
Steven Berkoff ... Charlie
Tony Denham ... Butch
Dani Dyer ... Lauren (as Danni Dyer)
Rating: 18
Summary (From IMDB):
When retired East End villain Charlie Archer is murdered by a feral street gang, his brother Ritchie returns to London from Spain to investigate.

First a proviso for fans of the gentlemanly Ian Ogilvy from such roles as The Saint - this is a much, much, much darker kind of film.

This is a gritty British film. It takes it's violence seriously. This is not a film for the squeamish or those expecting Hollywood style violence. It earns it's 18 rating. If you have seen Pan's Labyrinth by Guillermo del Toro, remember the scene with the bottle? That's what the violence is like in this film - shocking and uncomfortable.

That being said, I think that is a good thing because this is a film about human monsters, and violence should not be a comfortable, sanitised thing. There is rape, there is thuggery and there is torture in this film, so if that squicks or triggers you, leave this one off the watch list.

What is interesting is there is nothing gory. We are shown very little blood because many of the acts we see the person commit them, but not exactly what they are doing. It is not filmed like a splatter horror movie, which is, in a way what makes it worse. We experience what it going on even though we don't explicitly see every detail. It is very well done.

The E2 gang are the "bad guys" and violent nasty little thugs. From the first moment they are introduced I wanted them to get their just deserts and the need only increased the more I saw of the film. I really did hate the lead bad guy, Aaron (Danny-Boy Hatchard), which is just what Hatchard and the director wanted, I think.

However, the "good guys" are definitely not good people either. They are old time East End gangsters who have retired, but they are perfectly willing to admit what villains they were. In some ways, still are.

Richie (Ian Ogilvy) is an East End gent, with a touch of OCD, who has been living in Spain. He's left the violence and the crime behind, mostly, and is living the pampered life of the rich. However, when his brother is killed, he is perfectly willing to return and handle it himself. The film makes us like him, he's the hero after all, but the film doesn't sugar coat who he was or what he does.

His friends are:
  • Arthur (James Cosmo) - an Enforcer with anger management issues
  • Roy (Christopher Ellison) , a Torturer who can tell a lie at a glance
  • Butch (Tony Denham), a Body Disposal Expert with a liking for machetes
These are not nice men, but they are after scum, so they are the heroes.

All the cast do a superb job.

Lysette Anthony is brilliant as Lizzie, one of the locals who remembers the old days and is the person who alerts Richie to what is going on. She is perfect as the link to the nostalgia of the old days, although even she admits Richie and his brother were villains.

Dani Dyer does superbly as Lauren, the girl trying to fit in, and falling deeper and deeper down the rabbit hole into a nightmarish wonderland of violence and callous disregard for human life, as she does so.

And Alison Doody holds up the side for female empowerment as Detective Inspector Susan Taylor, trying to keep the East End as crime free as she can without stepping over the line.

This is a simple film about murder and retribution. It is well written, well directed and well filmed. In a couple of places I wanted to tell the camera man to just stand still, but that's simply modern film making for you.

There is no way to call this movie a nice film, but it is:
  1. entertaining
  2. satisfying.
There are moments designed to make us laugh. Many, many other moments that are there to make us shudder. Even moments that make us go 'awww'. It is put together so we hate the right characters and like those we are supposed to like.

There is no deeply complicated plot to make us think really hard, but the plot we do have is well thought out and put together so that it keeps us hooked.

"We Still Kill the Old Way" is a good film. I recommend it, but be warned about the violence.

Buy links: Amazon UK | Amazon US

The good news is there is also a sequel currently in post production. I shall definitely be adding that to my "to watch" list.

Have you seen "We Still Kill the Old Way"? Did you like it? If not is it the kind of film you might watch, or one you'd rather give a miss?


8 comments:

  1. How on earth did you find this one? It's not your usual fare :) Was it Ian Ogilvy, or a rec based on Legend?

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    1. There was nothing on telly so we took a look to see what new films had been added to the movie channels on SKY - this was the second one in the list :)

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  2. I have not seen this one. But I am a fan of Lysette Anthony, so I will have to find it.

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    1. She's very good, as ever :) I hadn't heard of it either, as I said to Soph, Rob and I just happened to click on it. Since it's on SKY I assume it will have made it to other streaming services too - especially with the sequel nearing completion.

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  3. That's an interesting notion that not seeing the blood actually makes it worse. I'm always fascinated by books/movies/tv shows where you end up rooting for the bad guys because they're better than the really bad guys :-)

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    1. The imagination is far nastier than most special effects :)

      The anti-hero trope can be a lot of fun, can't it :)

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  4. I haven't seen this even though we get Sky. As you say, the imagination is far nastier than SFX. Will watch out for it - wondered what Alison Doody did after Indiana Jones.

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    1. I was amazed, my parents watched it and I thought my mother would hate it because of all the swearing, but they really enjoyed it. I have to admit I didn't recognise Alison Doody until I looked her up for this post.

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