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Scum

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United Kingdom · 1979
Rated R · 1h 38m
Director Alan Clarke
Starring Ray Winstone, Mick Ford, Julian Firth, John Blundell
Genre Crime, Drama, TV Movie

Originally made as a BBC play, but banned before ever airing, "Scum" depicts the difficult and shocking story of life in a British Borstal for young offenders. The brutal regime made no attempt to reform or improve the inmates, and actively encouraged a power struggle between the tough new inmates and the 'old hands'.

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What are critics saying?

75

TV Guide Magazine by

The performances are mostly good, and the direction and editing work wonders in the tight gray interiors of the juvenile prison. Not for everyone, but worthwhile viewing for the not-easily-shocked.

90

Village Voice by Alan Scherstuhl

One of the great films about boys and violence, about the allure and horror and inevitability of young toughs seizing power by smashing some skulls — and replicating, in their own private hellscape, the societal structures that have ground them down.

80

The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg

If some of the plot seems familiar, the intelligence with which Mr. Clarke dissects the flaws of Britain’s “borstal” system is not. [15 Jun 2017]

80

Los Angeles Times by Justin Chang

In Scum, one of only three features he directed for the big screen, Clarke finds a bleak beauty in an institution devoted to controlling, yet also propagating, all manner of human ugliness.

75

The A.V. Club by Mike D'Angelo

A straightforward prison flick, basically, honoring all of the genre’s many conventions, from the sadistic screws to the wars between rival cell blocks to the innocent who gets brutally gang-raped.

75

The Film Stage by Mike Mazzanti

Scum lives up to its title to this day, its manic energy balanced with an assured and naked openness that creates a searing level of realism and, as such, savagery.

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