: Bill spends his time high, playing folk guitar and lamenting the decline of modern morals while ordering hits.
Ben Wheatley’s directorial debut, (2009), is a masterclass in low-budget, claustrophobic filmmaking that subverts the traditional British gangster genre by dragging it into the kitchen sink. Shot in just eight days in the home of co-writer Robin Hill’s parents, the film trades sprawling underworld empires for a cramped suburban house in Brighton, where the most dangerous weapon is often a poisoned cup of tea. Domesticity Meets Depravity Down Terrace
The story centers on Bill (Robert Hill) and his son Karl (Robin Hill), who return home after a prison stint convinced there is a "rat" in their midst. Unlike the slick, stylized criminals of Guy Ritchie films, these men are mundane and petty: : Bill spends his time high, playing folk
: Maggie (Julia Deakin) is the matriarch who brews tea and suggests garden burials with the same chilling level of calm. Domesticity Meets Depravity The story centers on Bill
: Karl is a man-child prone to toddler-like tantrums, trapped between a desire to leave the business and the violent legacy of his family. Key Creative Elements