This is England: Mods, New Romantics, and Skinheads are the major youth
sub-cultures of this very English summer of 1983 and young 12-year-old
Shaun is left wandering aimlessly alone and lost during the start of his
school holidays, until his chance meeting with Woody and his fun and
friendly Skinhead pack. Finding a new lease of life; girls, parties, Ben
Sherman shirts, Doc Martin boots and shaven hairstyles young Shaun is
welcomed, life during this summer holiday has got a whole lot better. That
is until Combo arrives on the scene bitter, dangerous, racist, militant and
psychotic life for young Shaun has just approached his first major
crossroads. This is England is a look back at the early eighties of British
working-class life through the eyes of young Shaun and his new gang, and
dealing with the bitterness of outside influences such as racism and
xenophobia, of mass unemployment and the fall out of the Falkland's War;
Thatcher's Britain: Did we ever have it so good? When you see Shaun, ask
Him.
Roland Rat, Margaret Thatcher; Rubik's Cubes, the Royal Wedding; aerobics,
skinheads... It's 1983, and the schools are breaking up for summer. Shaun
is 12 and a bit of a loner, growing up with his mum in a grim coastal town,
his dad killed fighting in the Falklands War. On his way home from school
where he's been tormented all day for wearing flares, he runs into a group
of skinheads, who against expectations turn out to be friendly and take him
under their wing. Soon Shaun discovers parties, girls and snappy dressing,
and finds some role models in Woody, Milky and the rest of the gang. But
when an older, overtly racist skinhead returns home from prison, the easy
camaraderie of the group is broken, and Shaun is drawn into much more
uncomfortable territory. Based largely on his own experience as a
youngster, this is Shane Meadows' most mature and fully realised film.
Handling the complexities of masculinity, violence and race with
sensitivity and a lightness of touch, it's hard to imagine a film that
would better capture the mood of the time, or that could have any greater
an understanding of the allure of being part of a gang.
12 year old Shaun lives with his widowed mother in a small town in Britain.
His father, an army officer, was one of the Falkland casualties. A loner,
he is befriended by some older skinhead youth, who shave off his hair, date
an older young woman, and subsequently introduce him to ex-convict Combo.
Shaun unwittingly volunteers to be part of Combo's gang, and is taken to a
meeting hosted by Britain's right-winged National Front, which openly
advocates ethnic cleansing; re-defines Racism as Reality; and Nazism as
Nationalism. Combo then takes his followers on a spree of sword and
knife-wielding terror, looting a corner store run by Sandhu, all eventually
get stoned and violence ensues.