Another View 2005 / A Way of Life / United Kingdom 2004
Eighteen-year-old Leigh-Anne, an unmarried mother, takes care of her little girl in a suburb of a Welsh industrial town. Always broke and living from day to day, she takes her growing frustration out on a Turkish family in the neighbourhood.
One might accurately characterise modern British cinema as full of stress, frustration and racial tension. Amma Asante?s debut is part of that trend, but despite the heroine’s racist displays, she is not unsympathetic. Leigh-Anne (played by talented new discovery Stephanie James) lives in industrial Wales. She is barely 18 but already an unmarried mother. Although she knows that life is a constant struggle, she truly loves her little girl and doesn’t want to give her up. Leigh-Anne has friends who try to help out a little, but malice still manages to grow inside her, inside her brother and her friends, too. The focus of their anger is a more affluent Turkish family living in the neighbourhood.... One of the film’s supporting roles is played by Brenda Blethyn, who’s performance in Secrets and Lies earned her a Best Actress Award from Cannes and the Golden Globes, and an Oscar nomination.
91 min / Color, 35 mm
Director Amma Asante
/ Screenplay Amma Asante
/ Dir. of Photography Ian Wilson
/ Music David Gray
/ Editor Steve Singleton, Clare Douglas
/ Producer Charlie Hanson, Patrick Cassavetti, Peter Edwards
/ Production AWOL Films
/ Cast Stephanie James, Nathan Jones, Gary Sheppeard, Brenda Blethyn, Dean Wong, Sarah Gregory, Oliver Hayden
/ Contact Portman Film and Television
www: www.awayoflifemovie.com
Amma Asante grew up in Streatham in South London, and in 1980-86 attended the Barbara Speake Stage School where she studied dance and drama. She started her film and television career as a child star (e.g. the series "Grange Hill," "Desmonds" and "Birds of a Feather"), then began writing scripts in her twenties, mainly for Channel 4 television. At age 28, she became the first black woman in the UK to both write and "Brothers and Sisters" for BBC2. A Way of Life (2004) is her directorial debut. "I’m black and I’m a woman, and I can identify with other human beings," Asante says. "But for me to be able to identify with a character who was ultimately going to express quite racist views, the easiest way was to make her fairly young and make her a woman."
Portman Film and Television
21-25 St. Anne's Court, W1F 0BJ, London
United Kingdom
Phone: +44 207 494 8024
Fax: +44 207 494 2046
E-mail: [email protected]
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