An alienated teenager, saddened that he has moved away from London, must find a way to deal with a dark family secret.An alienated teenager, saddened that he has moved away from London, must find a way to deal with a dark family secret.An alienated teenager, saddened that he has moved away from London, must find a way to deal with a dark family secret.
- Director
- Writer
- Alexander Stuart(novel)
- Stars
- Director
- Writer
- Alexander Stuart(novel)
- Stars
- Awards
- 9 wins & 12 nominations
Videos2
- Director
- Writer
- Alexander Stuart(novel) (screenplay)
- All cast & crew
- See more cast details at IMDbPro
Storyline
- Taglines
- When the worst of men hides in a family with no history.
- Genres
- Motion Picture Rating (MPAA)
- Rated R for sexual content, some involving molestation, and for nudity, language and a scene of violence
- Parents guide
Did you know
- TriviaAt a public screening of this movie during the 1999 Toronto International Film Festival, one viewer was so upset and devastated that he rose to his feet and shouted that he couldn't take any more, then headed for the exit, intending to pull the fire alarm. Director Tim Roth, who was in attendance, intercepted him at the door, and it took 20 minutes of intense conversation to calm the man down.
- Quotes
Tom: I saw you.
Jessie: Saw me what?
Tom: In the bath...
Jessie: Yeah?
Tom: What were you doing?
Jessie: What do you think? I got in and he got out.
Tom: That's not what I saw.
Jessie: Well, that's all it was.
Tom: Where were you?
Jessie: It's a pretty weird thing you're suggesting if you're saying what I think you're saying. I haven't told you to f@ck off or anything, which I probably should've. Nothing happened, OK? I'd tell you.
Tom: You couldn't.
Jessie: Yes, I could. You OK now?
- Alternate versionsThe R-rated US version has four minutes of footage, mostly involving incestuous acts, removed.
This was Tim Roth's directorial debut and he certainly wasn't looking for a popcorn hit. The story by Alexander Stuart from his own novel is very slow and deliberate but is ruthlessly effective. At first the whole family seems to have a strange sexual edge to it - the mother breast feeds in full view, the teenage brother and sister lie naked in front of each other etc. It gives things a strange feel but it's quickly forgotten when you get used to it. The guts of the story revolves around the father's sexual abuse of his daughter Jessie, who no longer fights but accepts it as part of her life. Some of the scenes - in particular the scene' - are too hard to watch and the whole thing is very powerful. The film develops slowly and does not allow the father to be a monster-type (the British media have a habit of demonising people rather than taking objective views). Here the film doesn't let him become a caricature even when his crimes come to light.
The cast are roundly brilliant. Winston plays it perfectly all the way and doesn't take the `monster' route. Freddie Cunliffe is excellent as Tom - although all he has to do is mope around the place. Lara Belmont is outstanding - this must have been so difficult to play but she is absolutely excellent throughout. Swinton is good as the mother, but her character is not well used or developed.
Overall it's very hard to watch. Roth's direction is a little too clever but is very good generally. A powerful story very well told - but it may not be to everyone's liking.
- bob the moo
- Jan 30, 2002
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Tim Roth's The War Zone
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $254,441
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $18,335
- Dec 12, 1999
- Gross worldwide
- $254,441
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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