Friday, May 7, 2010

Billy Elliot (2000)

Young Billy Elliot (Jamie Bell) secretly wants to learn ballet while his father, a striking coalminer, pays for his boxing lessons. Billy begins to take lessons on the sly. But when it’s discovered Billy is a natural talent, his father must come to turns with his boy’s dream. Caught between his disintegrating family and the memories of his mother, torn between his father’s wishes and his own, Billy comes of age with amazing results.

Set in Northern England, Billy Elliot sets the world of an 11 year old boy in the middle of the 1980’s strike creating a beautiful juxtaposition. The grittiness of the miner’s fight and Billy’s own gentle spirit compete making for compelling and symbolic film-making.  Director Stephen Daldry (The Reader) subtly crafts hope and hopelessness in every frame.

Jamie Bell leads an outstanding cast. His scenes are so powerful. As Billy, Bell is a genuine, innocent, but strong and his dancing is incredible. Supporting him is an equally strong cast including Julie Walters. But they all pale in comparison to Bell’s performance.

As I see it, Billy Elliot is an underrated masterpiece that succeeds as every element is spot-on. Writing, casting, cinematography, score—it’s all right on the mark and Jamie Bell is simply extraordinary.

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