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Sweet Sixteen, 2002

Sweet Sixteen

English

UK, Germany, Spain

Rating:7.5
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Profile of Sweet Sixteen

Sweet Sixteen can be described as bittersweet, gloomy, and sincere. The plot revolves around a downfall, juvenile delinquency, and life in an urban ghetto. The main genres are drama and crime. In terms of style, Sweet Sixteen features realism. In approach, it is serious and realistic. It is located in Scotland. Sweet Sixteen takes place in contemporary times. The movie has received attention for being a Cannes festival winner and critically acclaimed. Note that it involves drugs/alcohol, profanity, and violent content.

Summary of Sweet Sixteen

In the depressed Scottish town of Greenock, 15-year-old Liam (Martin Compston) anxiously awaits the release of his mother, Jean (Michelle Coulter), from prison. Kicked out of school, with only Jean's abusive boyfriend Stan, and her hateful father for guidance, Liam sets out on his own in hopes of having a fresh start waiting for his mother when she gets out. Deciding to buy a cottage near the river where he, his mother, and his sister, Chantelle (Annmarie Fulton) can live--Liam needs a way to make money as quickly as possible. He steals a stash of heroin from Stan, for him and his loose-cannon best friend, Pinball, to sell on the street--but it turns out that they're infringing on the territory of Tony (Martin McCardie), a local gangster. But Tony, admiring Liam's entrepreneurial spirit, takes Liam in as part of his gang and gives him the chance to increase his earnings exponentially.

Echoing his 1969 classic, KES, SWEET SIXTEEN sees British film veteran Ken Loach once again combining the coming-of-age film with the type of social realism for which he has become known. Casting mostly non-actors, including extremely talented lead Martin Compston, the film successfully generates the thrills one expects from the best youth culture films, but has an edge of gritty realism that one never sees in Hollywood fare. Capturing a true imprint of contemporary UK teenhood--including cell phones, drugs, hip-hop style, "joyriding," and an abundance of four-letter words, screenwriter Paul Laverty's script rings true, making us care about characters who do foolish things because they exist in a society with few other options.

Details

Language: English
Country: UK, Germany, Spain
Release date: 14 November 2002
Runtime: 106 min

Cast and Crew

Martin Compston as Liam in Sweet Sixteen
Martin Compston

as Liam

Michelle Coulter

as Jean

Photos

Martin Compston in Sweet Sixteen (2002)
Martin Compston in Sweet Sixteen (2002)
Annmarie Fulton and Martin Compston in Sweet Sixteen (2002)
Annmarie Fulton and Martin Compston in Sweet Sixteen (2002)
Martin Compston and director Ken Loach in Sweet Sixteen (2002)
Martin Compston and director Ken Loach in Sweet Sixteen (2002)

Clips

Sweet Sixteen
Sweet Sixteen: Home Video
Sweet Sixteen
Sweet Sixteen: Official Trailer

Critics Reviews

Variety
Rendered deeply moving by the director's peerless capacity to combine humor and compassion with honesty and despair.
The Onion (A.V. Club)
With startling clarity and dreadful logic, Loach and Laverty make sense of every bad choice Compston makes until he runs out of options, locked into a destiny that he can't escape, mainly because his good intentions are clouded by tragic naivete.

Users Reviews

realistic and sincere
Not the typical teen film, this one feels real. The title is very cynical and everything about this story is far from sweet. the atmosphere is very gloomy but you can really relate to the boy's hopes of getting out of his everyday life of crime and...
Likely to see
Not for me

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