DMovies - Your platform for thought-provoking cinema
Irish-singing, insult-hurling, drug-taking and politically incendiary hip-hop band from Belfast earn an adrenaline-inducing piece of autofiction - on VoD on Monday, October 7th

Would the first ever Irish language hip-hop band, with just one album under their belt, imagine that they would get a film made about their lives? Or, more aptly, a fictionalised film version of it, played by themselves? Possibly not. The outlandishness of such a predicament is likely to have been the impetus of director Rich Peppiatt first feature film. It isn’t to say the real-life Belfast trio Kneecap, also the title of this film, doesn’t warrant such interest. The band have struck chord with a burgeoning section of the Irish public: those who wish to reclaim the Celtic language, as well as making the case for a united Ireland.

Kneecap is comprised of childhood friend Mo Chara aka Liam and Móglaí Bap (Naoise), both from working-class Belfast families. They spend their time rapping lyrics, funding themselves through low-level drug dealing, consuming as much as they are selling. An altercation with the police, sees Liam get arrested. JJ, a music teacher who speaks the Irish language, is brought in as interpreter as Liam refuses to speak in English. JJ turns out to be a kindred spirit, if an odd pairing, to become the third wheel. Initially producing music to their lyrics, to eventually join the ensemble on stage as the balaclava wearing DJ Próvaí.

They rap mainly in Irish, with lyrics that are socially conscious and anti-establishment. Even though their songs are barred from playing Irish radio due to the heavy drug reference and swearing in their songs, the band’s popularity soars. This is further owed to their drug-fuelled, uncompromisingly electrifying live performances contributing to their quick ascension from empty local pub gigs to sold out music venues.

There is a plethora of colourful secondary characters. Liam’s conflicted feelings about his pro-union, protestant girl manifest themselves into unusual lovemaking. Naosie is the son of a presumed dead IRA militant Arlo played by a dishevelled Michael Fassbender. He is very much alive and in hiding but trailed by a local cop (Josie Walker), mother of Liam’s girlfriend. And of course, the presence of another, if ultimately irrelevant, cohort R-RAD (Radical Republicans Against Drugs), a military cohort which share the same political beliefs but are aggressively against drugs. These characters are too many and a little distracting, with some of the portrayals being fairly on the nose in their insistence to be funny and ridiculous.

Intermittently matters feel a tad gimmicky, the machinations of trying to be cool and edgy are rather transparent. The cinematography of Ryan Kernaghan is slick and polished, the mayhem on screen is highly stylised but often vacuous. A bombastic, beat heavy soundtrack blares out from every single frame. The film’s pulsating, sped-up rhythm invokes the essence of a prolonged music video, one with an abundance of ketamine-induced hallucinatory montages of gig scenes, club scenes, police chases and car chases, in setting of a gritty urban Belfast. Its reference to Danny Boyle’s economically depressed Edinburgh set Trainspotting (1996) is perhaps too close to the bone.

There is a delicate equilibrium to navigate a story like this with its comedic tone, its copious drug-taking visuals and its boys-will-be-boys bravado and yet marry it with a poignant political message that is supposed to cut through. The politics side of things becomes more complicated as the various factions coming into the fray. Viewers unaware of the political state of play of Northern Ireland, may have to read up beforehand. Kneecap’s, the band, success relies equally on the frenzied energy of their songs and their infectious live performance as on them being a voice for the progressive and the disenfranchised. This message gets a little lost in the perpetual accelerated madness, but the viewing experience is a gripping and all-consuming one, nonetheless.

Kneecap showed at Sundance London, when this piece was originally written. It also showed in the 58th Karlovy Vary International Film Festival. In cinemas on Friday, August 23rd. On VoD on Monday, October 7th.


By Daniel Theophanous - 07-06-2024

Daniel has contributed to publications such as Little White Lies, BFI, Tape Collective, Hyperallergic, DMovies and many others. A lot of Daniel’s work is focused on LGBTQI+ cinema and hosts a podcas...

DMovies Poll

Are the Oscars dirty enough for DMovies?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Most Read

Sexual diversity is at the very heart of [Read More...]
Just a few years back, finding a film [Read More...]
Forget Friday the 13th, Paranormal Activity and the [Read More...]
A lot of British people would rather forget [Read More...]
QUICK AND DIRTY: LIVE FROM TALLINN A candidate’s [Read More...]
Pigs might fly. And so Brexit might happen. [Read More...]

Read More

Our dirty questions to Carol Polakoff

 

Eoghan Lyng - 18-12-2024

Eoghan Lyng talks to the director of Speak Sunlight, a Spanish fable taking place during the Franco years; they talk about the Paris bookstore that changed her life, finding the right translator, the ultimate "American in Spain", the Beatles in Iberia, and much more [Read More...]

Our dirty questions to Adam Rybanský

 

Susanne Gottlieb - 17-12-2024

Susanne Gottlieb interviews the Czech director of Somewhere over the Chemtrails; they talk about conspiracy theories, the roots of small-town racism, stylisation, exaggeration, Easter slapping, and much more - as part of ArteKino 2024 [Read More...]

The 4th Red Sea International Film Festival: combining Arab and worldly vibes

 

Victor Fraga - 16-12-2024

Check out the winners, the trends, and our dirty thoughts on one of the most exciting film events of the Arab world, and a festival that we have followed since its inception [Read More...]