ā€˜Kneecapā€™ Review: Beats Over Belfast

by Pelican Press
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ā€˜Kneecapā€™ Review: Beats Over Belfast

Hip-hop draws much of its power from the self-mythologizing impulses of its artists, and ā€œKneecapā€ most definitely heeds this call. In this gleefully chaotic quasi-biopic, the members of the hip-hop group of the filmā€™s title are tall-tale heroes, the children of I.R.A. freedom fighters continuing the battle for Irish independence by other means: the reclamation of the Irish language, once actively suppressed, and only recently recognized by the United Kingdom as an official language in Northern Ireland.

That might not sound like a very punk endeavor, but the film ā€” based on the pioneers of Irish-language rap who broke out in 2017, and written and directed by Rich Peppiatt ā€” makes a solid case, connecting the struggles of Irish speakers to American civil rights and Palestinian resistance movements.

The gonzo dramedy is set in Belfast and stars the real-life band members as lightly fictionalized versions of themselves: Naoise (Naoise O Caireallain) and Liam Og (Liam Og O Hannaidh) are petty drug dealers and aspiring rappers. JJ (JJ O Dochartaigh) is a high school Irish teacher who happens upon a notebook of lyrics belonging to Liam and offers to produce the two younger menā€™s music in his garage. Wearing a balaclava knitted with the colors of the Irish flag, JJ becomes D.J. Provai by night, and the trio drink, smoke and snort up a storm before each increasingly packed show.

These drug-addled antics give the film its snappy, surreal sense of humor, which clicks only half the time. Its lodestar in this regard is ā€œTrainspotting,ā€ though ā€œKneecapā€ feels forced by comparison. Good thing the Kneecap boys are genuinely unhinged and amusingly louche. They bring a nerve that offsets the filmā€™s cringe attempts at badassery.

Thereā€™s also a lackluster story line involving Naoiseā€™s father, Arlo (Michael Fassbender), a Bobby Sands-like political leader who has lived in the shadows since faking his own death a decade earlier. Otherwise, we dip in and out of mini-intrigues that build out a portrait of life in Belfast ā€” Liam falls for a Protestant girl (Jessica Reynolds), the crew is terrorized by a group of antidrug mobsters. The film, as a result, feels wildly uneven, though it cruises on the strength of its underdog narrative and its weird, sordid touches.

Kneecap
Rated R for sex scenes, profanity, drug use and violent archival footage. Running time: 1 hour 45 minutes. In theaters.



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