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Dirty God

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Netherlands, United Kingdom, Belgium · 2019
1h 44m
Director Sacha Polak
Starring Vicky Knight, Katherine Kelly, Luke White, Tachia Newall
Genre Drama

Jade is a young mother in the prime of her life when an acid attack leaves her severely burned. While her face has been reconstructed, her beauty is lost beneath the scars. Jade must rebuild her self-image and her life by working through her trauma and finding ways to be happy again.

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What are critics saying?

80

Time Out by

Knight has mined her own traumatic experience to bring emotional depth to the character, and this extra layer of authenticity gives the film its impact.

80

The Guardian by Cath Clarke

It’s intense but not unwatchably painful, and so much more than an issue film or portrait of a victim. I really hope Knight finds a place in the film industry; with her terrific performance here she’s earned it.

80

Screen Daily by Fionnuala Halligan

Knight’s intuitive portrayal – her vulnerability, rage and raw sexiness – shows and tells exactly what it’s like. It’s a moving and emotional debut which knocks out any loaded sense of familiarity regarding the film’s no-hope setting.

80

Time Out by Hanna Flint

Knight has mined her own traumatic experience to bring emotional depth to the character, and this extra layer of authenticity gives the film its impact.

67

The Film Stage by Jared Mobarak

Dirty God isn’t some contrived pity project tugging on heartstrings. Polak is legitimately engaging with the aftermath of a real-life nightmare.

70

Variety by Jay Weissberg

Much attention will deservedly be paid to Knight’s impressively nuanced performance – it’s one thing to cast an amateur who’s been through similar experiences, and quite another to get that person to inhabit a fictional character.

80

Film Threat by Lorry Kikta

The actress playing Jade, Vicky Knight is a burn victim herself. It lends a realism to the movie that makes it by turns heartbreaking and inspiring.

80

The Observer (UK) by Mark Kermode

This is full-blooded (and arrestingly tactile) fare, which gets right under the skin of its central character, in appropriately unruly and unflinching fashion.

75

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

A compelling drama about self-image, dashed dreams and the growing up that might be on the other side of despair.

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