Limbo
- Director: Ben Sharrock
- Writer: Ben Sharrock
- Producer: Irune Gurtubai; Angus Lamont
CGiii Comment
Many years ago [1983 to be precise], a film came out of Scotland that made an indelible impression, Bill Forsyth's wondrous Local Hero.
Limbo - nearly 40 years later - makes more than an indelible impression, it will move you to the core. Ben Sharrock has taken his obvious inspiration and ran with it...without letting up for one second.
The absurdities of cultural indoctrination and appropriation. The majesties of memories and mothers. The sadnesses of being lonely and lost. This is Limbo - a place where hopes and dreams are impotently and patiently awaited, where fear and terror are a mere stone's throw away.
There is a ton of humour...but, no amount can gloss over the clagging inhumanity and the clawing condescension. Home secretaries [past and present] have grief, suffering, blood and death on their collective hands. Whether they be refugees or migrants...they remain displaced, misplaced and out-of-place...strangers in a stranger land.
One man - the Freddie Mercury adoring Farhad - has fled his country because of his sexuality...he is a bona fide refugee...and, delivers a line that will cause your heart to shatter. He draws that fine line between comedy and tragedy...with perfect precision.
There are others who have ambition beyond their reality...and then, there's Omar.
Amir El-Masry...bemused, bamboozled, beguiled...and, blank. A stunning, understated performance...not a boy, not yet a man...still, his vulnerability brings out the protective...Farhad assumes that particular mantle.
There's a line: I used to cry myself to sleep before my tears ran dry.
Limbo will make you feel, question, think...and, cry...until you have no tears left. Sad tears, happy tears, embarrassed tears. Beauty should always make you cry. And...Limbo is an undeniable beauty.
Thank you.
Trailer...
The(ir) Blurb...
Omar is a promising young musician. Separated from his Syrian family, he is stuck on a remote Scottish island awaiting the fate of his asylum request.
Cast & Characters
Kwabena Ansah as Abedi
Vikash Bhai as Farhad
Grace Chilton as Margaret
Kenneth Collard as Boris
Amir El-Masry as Omar
Cameron Fulton as Plug
Silvie Furneaux as Cheryl
Lewis Gribben as Stevie
Ellie Haddington as Beatrice
Sidse Babett Knudsen as Helga
Sanjeev Kohli as Vikram
Raymond Mearns as Mike
Kais Nashif as Nabil
Ola Orebiyi as Wasef