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The premise of Playing Away
is as simple as its effects are complex: a rural English village invites a West
Indian black cricket team from London’s Brixton section for a weekend
match, and the encounter proves to be rather comical.
"Obviously, the possibilities, both comic and serious,
in this cultural exchange are endless, and the film makers seem not to have
missed any of them. Playing Away however, is more
modest than trenchant. Don’t expect the energy or sharp cutting edge of
a Sammy and Rosie Get laid or a My Beautiful Laundrette but
rather the bemused detachment of a vintage Ealing comedy.
Not surprisingly, there’s wariness on both sides. But
Willie Boy (Norman Beaton), the proud, wryly philosophical captain of the Conquistadors,
is intent on accepting the invitation. Meanwhile, the captain of the Sneddington
Cricket Club, the innocent but overweeningly self-satisfied Derek (Nicholas
Farell), is confident of a handy Sunday afternoon victory.
From the moment the visitors are greeted with the strains of “Jamaica
Farewell,” the film is crammed with incidents. For openers Willie Boy
strikes up an acquaintance with an elderly ex-colonial (Robert Urquhart) who
tends to read much into the match while a mini-skirted local tart (Elizabeth
Anson) boldly sets her mark for Errol (Gary Beadle), one of the youngest and
huskiest of the Conquistadors.
The most uncomfortable of the Conquistadors is Jeff (Trevor Thomas), a suave
black urban professional who feels at home with neither the blacks nor the whites-but
does a strike a spark with Derek’s bored, neglected wife (Shelia Ruskin).
For all the film’s abundant humor, Ove, said to be Britain’s first
black film maker, and the Oxford-educated Phillips, never let us forget that
racial tensions lurk beneath the occasion’s sure of good will. Indeed,
some local punks are ever-threatening to turn ugly. The film makers, however,
are determined to be good sports-even as they reveal the Sneddington Cricket
Club surprised to discover how hard that can be." -- Los Angeles Times
|Trinidad-Tobago/UK|1986|100 mins|comedy|English|Horace
Ove, dir.|
“Ove’s second feature takes up the myth of the sport of cricket
and the black man and turns it into a humorous, pointed metaphor for what he
calls “the slave beating the master at his own game.” -- City
Limits Magazine
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