Denemek ALTIN - Özgür

REDEMPTION SONGS

The Independent

|

October 03, 2025

Actor Harris Dickinson announces himself as a thoughtful, gutsy filmmaker, writes Clarisse Loughrey, while a real-life horror story is warped by a heady dose of Hollywood drama

- Clarisse Loughrey

REDEMPTION SONGS

Urchin

Harris Dickinson is a name you'll be hearing a hell of a lot more of once he debuts as John Lennon in Sam Mendes's quartet of Beatles biopics. And he’s moved that discerning hand of his behind the lens for his directorial debut, Urchin.

It’s the opposite of a vanity project. In fact, it’s exactly the kind of work you hope for from an actor turned director — proof that Dickinson hasn’t wasted the enviable cinematic education provided to him by past collaborators Joanna Hogg, Steve McQueen and Babygirl’s Halina Reijn, and that he’s meaningfully considered what he can contribute by stepping behind the camera.

Urchin, a social-realist project with roots in Mike Leigh’s work, is open both to the kind of abstractions McQueen might pursue and the sweeter, observational humour that Charlotte Regan championed in Scrapper, another Dickinson-starrer. But all that style has a focused purpose: it lets us climb inside the head of its protagonist Mike (Frank Dillane), homeless and trapped in the addiction spiral, while faithfully depicting his extreme marginalisation from society.

Cinematographer Josée Deshaies might set up her camera on the other side of a busy road, so that we can only steal a few looks at Mike asking commuters for spare change. Then, when he’s alone in the shower, surrounded by silence for the first time in who knows when, the camera careens down the plughole and into his psyche, all hellish volcanic rock, amoebas, and water-slick caverns.

To whittle it all down, the point of

The Independent'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

The Independent

The Independent

Saracens find old fighting spirit to terrify Toulouse

Perhaps the days of Saracens as an Investec Champions Cup force are not quite as distant as they had seemed.

time to read

4 mins

January 12, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

THE X FACTOR

With six different cohorts now in the workplace, it's now the supposed slacker generation that's quietly running the show – and they're well suited to the task

time to read

6 mins

January 12, 2026

The Independent

PM could send military to Greenland on Nato mission

Sir Keir Starmer is considering sending British troops to Greenland as Donald Trump’s rhetoric over snatching the Danish territory continues to ratchet up.

time to read

4 mins

January 12, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

Defence spending lost to MoD overdraft, warns chief

The former head of the RAF has warned that increased defence spending in the UK is being “eaten up by the Ministry of Defence (MoD)’s overdraft” with the UK’s military footprint shrinking at a critical moment.

time to read

4 mins

January 12, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

Wegovy to launch stronger dose weight-loss jabs in UK

The UK's medicines regulator has approved a stronger dose of the weight loss jab Wegovy as demand for the drug is set to soar.

time to read

2 mins

January 12, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

Big Pharma bloodsuckers get rich from nit merry-go-round

Whenever I drop into a local pharmacy in Notting Hill, the staff look at me with huge sympathy. “Not again?”

time to read

4 mins

January 12, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

Tehran threatens retaliatory strikes on US military bases

Iran has threatened to attack US military targets if Donald Trump launches strikes over the country’s growing protests.

time to read

4 mins

January 12, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

Tears are not enough in this Shakespearean fan fiction

Poised to sweep Oscar season, Chloé Zhao's 'Hamnet' is less a masterpiece than a blunt spade designed to whack you over the head until you weep from the pain

time to read

5 mins

January 12, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

Mandelson refuses apology for friendship with Epstein

Peter Mandelson has refused to apologise to victims of Jeffrey Epstein for his friendship with the convicted paedophile and financier.

time to read

3 mins

January 12, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

ON THIS DAY

1628: Charles Perrault, French writer and collector of fairy tales, was born in Paris.

time to read

1 min

January 12, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size