āKneecapā Review: Beats Over Belfast
Hip-hop draws much of its power from the self-mythologizing impulses of its artists, and āKneecapā most definitely heeds this call. In this gleefully chaotic quasi-biopic, the members of the hip-hop group of the filmās 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 menās 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 āTrainspotting,ā though āKneecapā feels forced by comparison. Good thing the Kneecap boys are genuinely unhinged and amusingly louche. They bring a nerve that offsets the filmās cringe attempts at badassery.
Thereās also a lackluster story line involving Naoiseās 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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