{"id":6912,"date":"2009-10-29T15:29:55","date_gmt":"2009-10-29T15:29:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.filmdetail.com\/?p=6912"},"modified":"2009-10-29T15:29:55","modified_gmt":"2009-10-29T15:29:55","slug":"lff-2009-nowhere-boy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.filmdetail.com\/2009\/10\/29\/lff-2009-nowhere-boy\/","title":{"rendered":"LFF 2009: Nowhere Boy"},"content":{"rendered":"
Despite a plethora of potential pitfalls this drama about the early Nowhere Boy<\/a><\/strong> explores the teenage years of Lennon (Aaron Johnson<\/a>) and the two important women in his youth: his aunt Mimi Smith<\/a> (Kristin Scott Thomas<\/a>) who raised him and his mother Julia<\/a> (Anne Marie Duff<\/a>).\u00a0It also charts his early forays into music as he forms The Quarrymen<\/a> with a younger guitarist named Paul McCartney<\/a> (Thomas Sangster<\/a>).<\/p>\n Bringing a cultural icon like John Lennon to the big screen was always going to be a tricky affair but director Sam Taylor Wood<\/a> (making her feature debut) has wisely focused on the intriguing family dynamics of Lennon’s childhood and how they fed into his career.<\/p>\n But perhaps most importantly there is a craft and intelligence here that pays tribute to Lennon’s art without indulging in histrionics or\u00a0clich\u00e9s.<\/p>\n The opening of a film can nearly always reveal something about its quality and the nice use of a famous Beatles chord<\/a> to kick everything off indicated to me that things were going to be OK.<\/p>\n It is inevitable that most of the attention and focus of the film would fall on Aaron Johnson<\/a>, as filling the role of Lennon is perhaps one of the more daunting tasks faced by an actor in recent times.<\/p>\n But he does a good job at capturing the youthful intensity of the young songwriter and although it is a little rough around the edges, that feels appropriate given the emotional tumult of his home life.<\/p>\n Part of the strong bedrock of the film is an admirably tight script by Matt Greenhalgh<\/a> (who wrote the 2007 Ian Curtis biopic Control<\/a>) which treats Mimi and Julia as central characters rather than just peripheral support.<\/p>\n Based on the memoir ‘Imagine This: Growing Up With My Brother John Lennon<\/a>‘ by Lennon’s half sister Julia Baird<\/a>, it focuses quite tightly on their influence on Lennon’s formative years and his burgeoning friendship with McCartney.<\/p>\n Scott Thomas nicely captures the stern but ultimately loving adoptive parent whilst Duff is excellent as the energetic and erratic soul mate Beatles fans have long read about in various biographies.<\/p>\n Wisely the film – unlike some British efforts – looks properly cinematic by being shot in 2:35 widescreen<\/a> and cinematographer Seamus McGarvey<\/a> (who has a considerable experience of music vidoes) shoots with taste, tact and intelligence.<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n
\nyears of John Lennon<\/a> is a stylish and engaging biopic.<\/p>\n