British realism on the big screen can be hard to handle: crusty, claustrophobic little pictures full of gray skies and pasty complexions. But Andrea Arnoldโ€™s tough, clear-eyed coming-of-age tale Fish Tank adds some juice to the genre. The writer-director takes a plot worthy of a Lifetime TV movieโ€”think Mother, May I Sleep With Your Boyfriend?โ€”and gives it a kitchen-sink makeover, only without the oppressive drabness and didacticism. The film tells the story of Mia, a 15-year-old wannabe breakdancer (impressive non-pro Katie Jarvis) who lives in an English housing project. Mia starts to peek out from her seething haze of adolescent resentment when her mom brings home a handsome new lover named Connor (Michael Fassbender).

What happens between Mia and Connor is hardly surprising; we sense from the moment he appears that this frequently shirtless, affably teasing bloke could be trouble for a teenage girl desperate for connection. But Arnold toys ever so slightly with our expectations, making Connor both an appealing father figure and a shifty, unreadable male presence in an all-female household (aside from the boozy mother, thereโ€™s potty-mouthed kid sister). The filmmaker navigates her protagonistโ€™s story with uncommon empathyโ€”her camera sticks by Miaโ€™s side in breathless tracking shots and purposeful close-ups that capture tiny flickers of fragility in a character whom we first see head-butting a rival.

If Fish Tank feels more fluid, more passionate than other recent English films about the wretched working classes, itโ€™s because Arnold dares to inject her stark material with a welcome bit of lyricism. It doesnโ€™t always workโ€”thereโ€™s some clumsy symbolism involving a tied-up horseโ€”but it gives the film a sweep that builds toward a finale of startling power and optimism.

Just before that, the director stages one sublime sceneโ€”a deeply odd and wrenching moment of familial reconciliation involving hiphop dance thatโ€™s unlike anything Iโ€™ve ever seen, and worth the price of admission alone. recommended

2 replies on “Fish Tank: Mother, May I Sleep with Your Boyfriend?”

  1. I’m just so happy that we’ve exported and infected the rest of the world with our hip hop culture… makes me super-duper, star-spangled proud of my country!

    Yay! Breakdancing in the year 2010…

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