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The Front
Line
DIR/WRI: David Gleeson PROD: Nathalie
Lichtenthaeler DOP: Volker Tittel ED: Stuart Gazzard
DES: Jim Furlong CAST: Eriq Ebouaney, James Frain,
Gerard McSorley, Hakeem Kae-Kazim, Orla O'Rourke, Fatou N'Diaye,
Bryan Eli Sebunya, Ian McElhinney
Three years ago, director David Gleeson first
made his mark with a promising feature-length debut, Cowboys
& Angels, an engaging teen rites of passage tale set
in Limerick. Now he's back with The
Front Line, an Irish-African heist movie that tackles
a little-known war in the Congo and the immigrants' experience
of our post-Celtic Tiger wonderland, in that order.
When Joe Yumba (Eriq Ebouaney) arrives in Dublin
from the Congo, he is pleased to get a job as a bank security
guard and have his wife Kala (Fatou N'Diaye) and son Daniel
(Bryan Eli Sebunya) join him from home. Haunted by nightmares
and covered in scars, he clearly has good reason to seek asylum.
But just as things are looking up, fresh disaster strikes
in the form of local criminal Eddie Gilroy (James Frain) and
his gang who take Kala and Daniel hostage and force Joe to
allow them midnight access to the bank's inner vaults.
But Joe is neither a straightforward victim
nor a hero; his 'family', it has already been implied, is
not all it seems. The mystery of his true identity and his
recent history is one of the more tantalising aspects of a
plot punctuated by impressive twists and turns and underscored
by a wonderfully brooding, doom-laden atmosphere.
Having played the title role in Lumumba
(2000), Eriq Ebouaney is no stranger to events in the Congo.
The Paris-based actor brings conviction, dignity and serious
screen presence to the lead in The Front Line. As his
screen wife, Fatou N'Diaye is another actor the camera loves.
She plays a woman of few words, easily communicating instead
via facial expression and body language.
Of the Irish contingent, reliable veterans Gerard
McSorley and Ian McElhinney make characteristically strong
contributions to the ensemble. As Detective Inspector Harbison,
McSorley (for once) gets to play a good cop, a man whose own
personal tragedy and loss gives him an understanding, as matters
unfold, of Joe's predicament (a sympathetic immigration official,
whatever next?). McElhinney plays the smaller but vital part
of Mikey, a cleaner and casual racist at the bank.
Good performances all round (Englishman James
Frain makes a great Dublin gangster), save for newcomer to
the silver screen, Orla O'Rourke. She admittedly doesn't have
much to do as Detective Susan Clohessy except look supportive,
and turns in a fairly wooden offering.
For spills, thrills and striking locations,
The Front Line is an exciting second movie from David
Gleeson. Joe's flashbacks to his native country are genuinely
disturbing, while Ireland's capital city is seen from the
outsider's perspective, from the cold formality of the immigration
office to the bustle of Moore Street market. The crowded shopping
chaos of Henry Street plays a crucial role in a late stand-off
scene between Joe and Gilroy's gang. A tendency to intermittent
sentimentality, particularly in the final encounter between
Joe and DI Harbison in Christchurch, mars the tone on occasion,
but if that's the price to pay for The Front Line bringing
some emotion to the fore, then so be it.
Ana Carbery
Rated
15A (see IFCO
website for details)
The Front Line is released on 25th August 2006.
The
Front Line Official website
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