South Coast Première
Anyone who recalls misspent summers of youth will understand well how a single day can echo down the years. Like the similarly resonant stories of Rob Reiner's Stand by Me, or much of Shane Meadows's work, Summer Scars captures fragile youth at a turning point, with cracks opening up onto the darker adult world.
Six friends bunk off school to spend the day in the woods, and armed with a few cans of beer and some very inadequate barbecue skills, they're free to do just what 14-year-olds do best: show off, swear, fight and spend the day just hanging out together. The first reel of Julian Richards's drama is spent solely in the company of these six.
Riding a stolen moped around the bumpy woodland paths, two of the gang collide with a lone adult, Peter (Kevin Howarth). They fear the worst, and leg it from the scene, but Peter is unharmed and soon emerges to join the group. Attention turns to this unknown quantity, and the focus of the group shifts. Peter seems to be 'down with the kids'. He's sympathetic, and is soon leading the gang into new scrapes.
But Peter can't be pinned down – one minute he's offering life lessons to his young charges, the next he seems more sinister, playing divide and conquer, and easily exploiting tensions by turning friends against one another. As the afternoon wears on, events take worrying turns, and it appears Peter's agenda may be closing in on the gang.
This low-budget indie thriller makes all the right moves with an engagingly 'real' cast of youngsters. Never patronising, and edgy throughout, it's a heartfelt picture of fragile youth.
A DigiBeta presentation in The Studio.
(Tickets £5)
We hope to welcome director Julian Richards to introduce & discuss his film.
UK · 2007 · Julian Richards · 75min