| Jane Birkin | Dialogue |
BROTHER Clement Virgo gets personal with a searing drama of racial injustice in Toronto…
When writer-director Clement Virgo first picked up David Chariandy’s novel Brother in 2018, he couldn’t put it down. There was something within the tale of two immigrant siblings that resonated deeply with him. ‘The story of the family, the story of the immigrant experience, the story of trying to find your personhood spoke to me,’ he tells Teasers.
Virgo’s haunting new adaptation has Aaron Pierre (The Underground Railroad) and Lamar Johnson (The Last of Us) as chalk-and-cheese brothers Francis and Michael, raised by single mother Ruth (Marsha Stephanie Blake). One is an extroverted musical talent, the other is quiet and watchful, until their lives are knocked off course by racial injustice.
It’s a stirring exploration of family, loss and Black masculinity, which draws from Virgo’s own experience of growing up in Toronto, where the film is set. ‘I was very sensitive,’ says the director, whose credits include The Wire, Empire and Billions. ‘I had to present myself [as] tougher than I was.’ What he calls the ‘performance of masculinity’ is explored here with grace and depth.
‘I had to present myself as tougher than I was ’
CLEMENT VIRGO
Music plays a big part, too, as Brother draws together songs from Nina Simone, Curtis Mayfield and Eric B. & Rakim. ‘I was interested in exploring music from the Black diaspora, because that’s the music I grew up with.’ And when a track dies out, there’s a hushed poetry that courses through this drama about the heavy pall that grief can cast.
‘Hopefully the audience [will] recognise some emotional truth in the film,’ says Virgo. ‘I want people to be moved, entertained, and to be inspired.’ ANN LEE
BROTHER OPENS IN CINEMAS AND IS AVAILABLE ON CURZON HOME CINEMA FROM 29 SEPTEMBER.
SHORT CUTS
The latest happenings in movieland…
TURTLE POWER
Paramount are shelling out on a sequel to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, plus a twoseason series on Paramount+. Ramsey Ann Naito, Nickelodeon/Paramount Animation president, said, ‘We are thrilled to continue expanding the beloved Turtles universe.’
BOOKS OF BLOOD
A four-issue comic-book adaptation of American Psycho will hit shelves later this year. It will feature two storylines, one giving readers Patrick Bateman’s killing spree from a fresh perspective, and one focusing on ‘all-new psychopath’ Charlie, a social mediaobsessed millennial.
BET ON BLACK
Black Panther has been voted the greatest superhero film by Rolling Stone. ‘It proved that superhero movies could be about something more than just entertainment — they could reflect, refract and represent the real world around us,’ was the verdict.
BEYOND MEASURE
Trilogy capper Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse has been put back indefinitely by Sony, with the SAG-AFTRA strike meaning the voice cast will be unable to hit proposed deadlines. Several other movies have been bumped, including Challengers, Kraven the Hunter and Bad Boys 4.