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A Room for Romeo Brass

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United Kingdom, Canada · 1999
Rated R · 1h 30m
Director Shane Meadows
Starring Paddy Considine, Andrew Shim, Frank Harper, Vicky McClure
Genre Comedy, Drama

Two twelve-year-old boys, Romeo and Gavin, undergo an extraordinary test of character and friendship when Morell, a naive but eccentric and dangerous stranger, comes between them. Morell befriends with the two boys and later asks them to help him pursue Romeo's beautiful elder sister. He gradually becomes more violent after she rejects him.

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What are critics saying?

75

Chicago Tribune by

Offers an honest, understated and unsentimental look at a small incident in the course of a friendship - but it is the kind of incident that defines most childhoods.

70

Village Voice by Amy Taubin

So low-key it could be mistaken for a throwaway. But Meadows's understanding of childhood fears and fantasies and the yearning, heartfelt performances he draws from his two young actors should not be underestimated.

80

Film.com by Ernest Hardy

By turns amusing, touching and horrifying, A Room For Romeo Brass is a film that defies expectation at every turn.

63

New York Daily News by Jack Mathews

Meadows is very good with the boys' relationship, and achieves his and Fraser's central goal of showing how childhood bonds can be simultaneously fragile and strong.

80

Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas

An assured, graceful instance of effective screen storytelling, and Meadows draws splendid performances from his cast, especially from the young Shim and Marshall.

70

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

It is essentially a personal reminiscence of daily life that captures with an astonishing precision exactly what it felt to be a 12-year- old boy growing up in a particular time and place.

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