Growing pains of peeping Tom - Film - Arts - Evening Standard
       

Growing pains of peeping Tom

Critic Rating
Reader Rating 0

Scottish director David Mackenzie never makes films that go entirely orthodox ways. He's a director of some originality and power, and this adaptation of a novel by Peter Jinks gives him ample opportunity to confound expectations. It also gives Jamie Bell his best role since Billy Elliot.

Bell plays Hallam, half-boy, half-man, who spends his time spying on lovers from his Edinburgh treetop fortress and refusing to go to college. He is haunted by the apparent suicide of his mother, and obsessed with the idea that his father's new woman (Claire Forlani) has somehow killed her.

When she tries to befriend him by climbing up into his treetop, the enmity only strengthens - even though the two end up having a distinctly hostile kind of sex. So Hallam leaves home, comes across someone (Sophia Myles) he at first thinks is his mother, then begins to regard her as a potential lover when she gets him a job as a dishwasher at the hotel where she is manageress.

True to form, he climbs on the roof, spies on her in her room and watches as her married lover (Jamie Sives) gives her a rough seeing-to.

As you may now guess, this is a strange, if not rather weird movie about the perils of adolescence, a bit like (in the director's words) "a fucked-up version of Catcher in the Rye". You are perfectly at liberty to think that it might have been better as a book rather than a somewhat incredible film.

But, even so, Mackenzie's work is good enough to allow us to ignore our doubts. He makes Edinburgh seem a very real and rather beautiful city without once relapsing into touristy views. He gets his cast to act with conviction, even in the smallest parts. And he has in Bell a leading actor who never overplays, but gives us a portrait of a slightly cracked young man that is totally convincing.

This is no ordinary British film. It is beautiful to look at, thanks to Giles Nuttgen's cinematography, and has an imaginative and erotic edge to it that lifts it above the norm - even if sex is not the main purpose of Hallam's voyeurism.

Somehow the whole works surprisingly well, whether or not you end up thinking that it might have been still better left on the page.

Hallam Foe
Cert: 18

Comments

Don't Miss
The Glamour Awards - stars turn on the style

Glamour Awards

Stars turn on the style
Duchess of Cambridge is pretty in pink at her first Buckingham Palace garden party

Garden party

Duchess of Cambridge is pretty in pink
FIRST review of Ridley Scott's latest sci-fi blockbuster Prometheus

First review

Is Ridley Scott's Prometheus any good?
Fair-weather goths

Fair-weather goths

The sultry shades of summer darks are coming out of the shadows
London gets ready for the Diamond Jubilee - in pictures

Diamond Jubilee

London gets ready - in pictures
Dog save the Queen: Corgis surge in popularity

Dog save the Queen

Corgis surge in popularity
'He’s a better ex than he was a husband', says Boris Johnson's ex wife

A better ex than husband

We talk to Boris Johnson's ex wife
TV Baftas - in pictures

Best of the Baftas

Stars on the red, white and blue carpet
You big softie: Has Giles Coren put down his poison pen?

You big softie

Has Giles Coren put down his poison pen?
Pop star Paloma Faith, former Labour minister and Tory blogger back gay marriage video

Gay marriage

Pop star, former Labour minister and Tory blogger back gay marriage video