Broken

Skunk is an 11 year-old girl who lives a carefree life with her father, on a cul-de-sac in a very much middle-class neighborhood in Britain. At the beginning of the movie Skunk sees Rick, a young man living across the street, getting violently beaten up by yet another neighbor, Mr. Oswald. We later...

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Corporate Author: Film Movement (Firm), British Film Institute., BBC Films., LipSync Productions., Cuba Pictures (Firm)
Other Authors: Clay, Daniel, 1970-, O'Rowe, Mark., Roth, Tim., Murphy, Cillian, 1976-, Kinnear, Rory, 1978-, Laurence, Eloise., Emms, Robert., Kenwright, Bill, 1945-
Format: Videos DVD
Language: English
Published: [New York] : Film Movement, c2012.
Subjects:
Summary: Skunk is an 11 year-old girl who lives a carefree life with her father, on a cul-de-sac in a very much middle-class neighborhood in Britain. At the beginning of the movie Skunk sees Rick, a young man living across the street, getting violently beaten up by yet another neighbor, Mr. Oswald. We later learn that one of Oswald's daughters, in order to save face, told her dad that Rick raped her, following which Oswalt in a rage pummels Rick. Skunk is unwittingly drawn into the neighbors' unfolding melodrama of violence, sex, and life-shattering illness. her home, neighborhood and school become treacherous enviroments where the happy certainties of childhood give way to fear-filled doubt. She is drawn into an ethereal chaos from which she may only return through the intense of of those closest to her.
Item Description: Based on the novel by Daniel Clay. Screenplay by Mark O'Rowe.
Includes a bonus short film (15 min.): The way the world ends, directed by Matthew B. Wolff. An ordinary suburbanite couple discovers that the natural world simply vanished during the night. Yet even stranger, all their neighbors carry on with their daily routines.
Physical Description: 1 videodisc : sd., col. ; 4 3/4 in.
Format: DVD. NTSC, aspect ratio 16:9.
Audience: Not rated.
Production Credits: Produced by Dixie Linder, Tally Garner, Nick Marston and Bill Kenwright.