Harry Brown
DVD
- Actor/Actress: Michael Caine, Emily Mortimer, Charlie Creed-Miles, Ben Drew, Liam Cunningham
- Director: Daniel Barber
- Color Type: Color
- Format: DVD
- Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 (Cinemascope)
- Rating: R
- Runtime (minutes): 103
- Year: 2009
- Number of Discs: 1
- UPC: 043396353800
- Item Number: COL035380
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Harry Brown on DVD
Academy Award nominee Daniel Barber (The Tonto Woman) makes his feature directorial debut with this gritty critique on contemporary British society starring Michael Caine as an elderly shut-in who's spurred to action by a senseless act of violence. Harry Brown (Caine) resides in a desolate public-housing apartment block as his sickly wife lies dying in a local hospital. He spends most of his days in solitude, only getting out to play the occasional game of chess at a nearby pub with his best friend, Leonard (David Bradley). The days of basic human decency seem to be a thing of the past, because in recent years barbarous drug dealers and gangsters have overtaken the dilapidated complex. Killing is a way of life for these young thugs, and as a result overburdened detectives Frampton (Emily Mortimer) and Hicock (Charlie Creed-Miles) are essentially relegated to knocking on doors and notifying parents when their children have been killed in the latest fracas, instead of investigating the crimes and jailing the guilty parties. When Leonard is murdered just feet from his own apartment, former Royal Marine Harry utilizes the skills he learned while fighting the IRA to take on the aggressive chavs who have intimidated the police into inaction. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
- Actor/Actress: Michael Caine, Emily Mortimer, Charlie Creed-Miles, Ben Drew, Liam Cunningham
- Director: Daniel Barber
- Color Type: Color
- Format: DVD
- Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 (Cinemascope)
- Rating: R
- Runtime (minutes): 103
- Year: 2009
- Number of Discs: 1
- UPC: 043396353800
- Item Number: COL035380
- Sound By: Dolby Digital 5.1
- Released By: Sony Pictures
-
Cast:
- Michael Caine - Harry Brown
- Emily Mortimer - D.I. Frampton
- Charlie Creed-Miles - D.I. Hicock
- Ben Drew - Noel Winters
- Liam Cunningham - Sid Rourke
- David Bradley - Leonard Attwell
- Iain Glen - S.I. Childs
- Sean Harris - Stretch
- Jack O'Connell - Marky
- Jamie Downey - Carl
- Lee Oakes - Dean
- Joe Gilgun - Kenny
- Marva Alexander - Nurse #1
- Liz Daniels - Kath
- Marvin Stewart-Campbell - Stunt Neighbour
- Lauretta Gavin - Neighbour's Wife
- Rad Kaim - Doctor
- Claire Hackett - Jean Winters
- Ashley McGuire - Community WPC
- Raza Jaffrey - Father Bracken
- Martin Wilde - Stunt Boyfriend
- Sian Mine - Stunt Girlfriend
- Klariza Clayton - Unconscious Girl
- Grace Vallorani - Linda
- Sue Farr - Karaoke Singer
- Forbes KB - Troy Martindale
- Michelle Tate - Female Gang Member
- Orla O'Rourke - Nurse #2
- Andy Pilgrim - Stunt Youth
- Danny Freitas - Stunt Rioter
- Mens-Sana Tamakloe - Stunt Rioter
- Robert B. Hunt - Stunt Policeman
- Gary Hoptrough - Stunt Policeman
- Gary Connery - Stunt Policeman
- Amanda Foster - Stunt Policewoman
- Charlie Ramsay - Stunt Policeman
- Pete Ford - Stunt Policeman
- Andy Merchant - Stunt Policeman
- Ian Van Temperley - Stunt Policeman
- Erol Mehmet - Stunt Policeman
- Roy Taylor - Stunt Policeman
- Chris Pollard - Stunt Policeman
- Amy Steel - Nurse #3
- Robert Styles - Journalist
- Andy Wareham - Stunt Boy on Bike
- Tony Messiah - Gang Member #1
- Ian Pead - Stunt Boy on Bike
- Belinda McGinley - Mother
- Ashley George - Boy in Len's flat
- Amy Edge - Girl in Len's Flat
-
Credits:
- Daniel Barber - Director
- Kris Thykier - Producer
- Matthew Brown - Producer
- Matthew Vaughn - Producer
- Keith Bell - Producer
- Gary Young - Screenwriter
- Martin Ruhe - Cinematographer
- Martin Phipps - Composer (Music Score)
- Ruth Barrett - Composer (Music Score)
- Matt Biffa - Musical Direction/Supervision
- Joe Walker - Editor
- Kave Quinn - Production Designer
- Chris Lowe - Art Director
- Steve Norris - Executive Producer
- Tim Smith - Executive Producer
- Paul Brett - Executive Producer
- Tim Haslam - Executive Producer
- Christos Michaels - Executive Producer
- Reno Antoniades - Executive Producer
- Jane Petrie - Costume Designer
- Gemma Ryan - Set Decorator
- Simon Hayes - Sound/Sound Designer
- Gareth Milne - Stunts Coordinator
- Dan Hubbard - Casting Director
- Lucie Graves - Post Production Supervisor
- Pedro Sabrosa - Visual Effects Supervisor
- Jacqueline Fowler - Hair Styles, Makeup
- Emma Olrich-Smith - Production Coordinator
- Pete Tong - Additional Music
- Paul Rogers - Additional Music
Discover more about Harry Brown's unique style of vigilante justice with Deleted Scenes and Commentary with the Filmmaker's and Cast
Editorial Reviews
It's usually a good sign when a film instantly engages the audience with a dynamic, compelling, and (in this case) absolutely chilling opening sequence. That is unless, of course, those first frenetic moments turn out to be the pinnacle of the film's creative interest, which is unfortunately the case with Harry Brown. After getting off to a stellar start and setting up a complex, authentic, and utterly relevant scenario, Harry Brown sputters out by devolving into yet another cinematic shoot-out that relies entirely on the familiar conceit of men pointing guns at one another to stir up superficial drama.Sir Michael Caine is officially infallible when it comes to choosing roles, but his prestige turns out to be a burden that first-time feature director Daniel Barber can't quite shoulder. Barber ostensibly got this job on the strength of his Oscar-nominated short film, The Tonto Woman, and he showcases his mastery of the short form in the film's first 30 minutes as he employs substantive details, striking visuals, diverse pacing, and intriguing editing to set up Caine's character, Harry Brown, as a woefully lonely old man whose apartment complex has been besieged by drug-dealing hooligans. At first, Brown is content to live in palpable distress, but when his best friend falls victim to a vicious attack, Brown's quiet anxiety transforms into wrath and he begins to enact his own brand of geriatric revenge on the thugs. At this point, the quiet anguish once felt by Brown is gradually transferred to those of us in the audience who were hoping for a more thoughtful examination of the myriad agonies involved when the deterioration of age forces strong, respectable people to gradually surrender their pride and personal sovereignty to the threat of adolescent nihilism and violence.
The film's young miscreants are portrayed with about as much subtlety as the villains from Batman -- they represent pure malevolence, and the script makes no real attempt to humanize them in any way. This simplified depiction in turn reduces the depth of Caine's character by removing any moral dilemma from his decision to turn vigilante. The police characters in the film are similarly shallow, settling into the requisite stereotypes of the naive newbie with impeccable investigative instincts, the embittered and skeptical partner, and the politically ambitious chief who makes incompetent street decisions from behind his polished desk. In addition to these character issues, the last half of the film is marred by a series of ridiculous actions and impossible achievements by the principal characters. After watching a car drive off from his apartment window, with no knowledge of where it's going, the elderly Brown is somehow able to track down the vehicle on foot. Later, two hooligans, when confronted with the threat of gunfire by an assailant hidden in darkness at the end of a tunnel, inexplicably decide to slowly approach their attacker rather than sprinting for freedom at the other end. A piece of critical information about one of the characters is artificially withheld from Brown (and the audience) until just after the revelation could have prevented him from making a foolish mistake.
The premise and promise of Harry Brown are exemplary, which makes its prosaic resort to gun violence as resolution all the more disappointing. What's worse, the film's ultimate failure becomes more acute thanks to its many affinities with Gran Torino, Clint Eastwood's far superior version of aged vengeance against youthful insurrection. In that film, Eastwood's character eventually learns that attempting to combat violence with violence inevitably exacerbates the situation, rather than diffusing it. Oddly, Barber and company seem to imply the exact opposite, and their film suffers thematically and aesthetically from this questionable moral stance. ~ Phillip Maher, Rovi
