Watch: Down Terrace 2009 123movies, Full Movie Online – After serving jail time for a mysterious crime, Bill and Karl get out of jail and become preoccupied with figuring out who turned them in to the police. On top of that, the “family business” is on the rocks, and the motley crew of criminals who operate out of Down Terrace aren’t feeling terribly trusting of one another. It might look like an ordinary house, but at Down Terrace, the walls are closing in….
Plot: After serving jail time for a mysterious crime, Bill and Karl get out of jail and become preoccupied with figuring out who turned them in to the police. On top of that, the “family business” is on the rocks, and the motley crew of criminals who operate out of Down Terrace aren’t feeling terribly trusting of one another. It might look like an ordinary house, but at Down Terrace, the walls are closing in..
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Less Is More, Much more.
British crime films are a very mixed bunch, for every ‘Long Good Friday’ or ‘Sexy Beast’, there is a whole load of low rent, formulaic fayre of diminishing returns.This film has one advantage from the off, not being set in London – or as many of the characters in the poorer films of this genre say it, ‘Laanndan’. (Hiding those well brought up accents can be a strain perhaps).
It’s set in Brighton, a town (recently upgraded to a ‘City’) on England’s south coast. But not the Brighton known to many here in recent years, the place of celeb second homes, nightclub culture, a liberal place for homosexuals before most of the rest of the country became more adult and relaxed about this part of society.
The Brighton of mundane suburbia is the setting, not the cultural epicentre.
Largely set in a home, where Bill and his wife live with their 34 year old son, we first see them, the father and son, after being acquitted in a drugs trial, little to celebrate though – how did they get into court in the first place? Who grassed them up – have to be someone close, to their right little, tight little world of lower ranking club employees and drug pushers.
The home is the actual dwelling of the actor playing the father, where the son – his real life son – was actually brought up. Only the mother is played by a quite familiar actress – Julia Deakin. The father, Bill, being an ex hippy who wistfully reflects on the brief period of apparent enlightenment through Cannabis and LSD, via yoga and the Tibetan Book Of The Dead, before money, crime, harder drugs, intruded – which swept up Bill too.
So begins a claustrophobic period of suspicion, paranoia, leading to violence and murder. Between bouts of domestic bickering, including a ‘meet my pregnant girlfriend’ family dinner that is a mire of passive-aggressiveness.
The cast are largely drawn – when they are not family members of the writer and actor playing the son – from innovative and usually rather dark comedy shows and stand up.
Micro budget it might have, but Down Terrace punches well above it’s weight. Lack of flash leads to a concentration on family dynamics – albeit a deeply disturbing one – realistic script and genuine plot shocks and surprises.
This film is refreshing, often laugh out loud funny – darkly funny usually – intense and a real gem. Clearly a labour of love from the small team involved in the whole production, a labour though of inspiration rather than just perspiration.
Claustrophobic and intense. Ben Wheatley is an exciting talent.
Writer/director Ben Wheatley’s debut feature film Down Terrace is British drama that fuses together the kitchen sink social realism of Shane Meadows, Ken Loach and ‘The Royle Family’ to make compelling yet highly uncomfortable viewing. Wheatley, who demonstrates flair for creating small moments of humour around intense menace really sets his marker down with this unsettling look into the world of a crime family in steep decline. Thanks to being mostly confined to the small rooms of your average two-up-two-down terraced house, the film has a sense of real claustrophobia which is accentuated all the more by the intensity of the drama. It’s one of those films where even as people sit down to a family meal, you can sense the brewing violence in the air. The tight, confined spaces only serve to heighten the feeling of being trapped in these small rooms with psychotic characters. All the performances register strongly, the picks being Robert Hill (Bill) and Julia Deakin (Maggie), the mother and father of the house, or Godfather and Godmother. To begin with, Maggie has the demeanour of the loving, but downtrodden Mum who runs to the kitchen when the boys start arguing, but as things unfold her character develops and the performance is chillingly well measured. Anyone familiar with Wheatley’s follow up film ‘Kill List’ will cheer when the likable Michael Smiley turns up in a similar small role. So, Down Terrace sets a strong precedent for a debut director with its realism, horror and blacker than black comedy
Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 33 min (93 min), 1 hr 29 min (89 min) (USA)
Budget 31192
Revenue 10000
Status Released
Rated R
Genre Crime, Drama
Director Ben Wheatley
Writer Ben Wheatley, Robin Hill
Actors Robin Hill, Robert Hill, Julia Deakin
Country United Kingdom
Awards 3 wins & 4 nominations
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