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Filth (18)

Filth (18)

Comedy, Crime, Drama

A bipolar, bigoted junkie cop manipulates and hallucinates his way through the festive season in a bid to secure promotion and win back his wife and daughter.


The critical consensus

For all its outrageous humour and exuberant embrace of the politically incorrect, Filth is still a modern morality tale with some unexpected sentimentality lurking beneath its thick, scrofulous skin.

****(*)Allan Hunter, The List, 18/09/2013

As a movie experience it is both gruelling and transcendent, but its best scenes can prey on your mind for days.

****(*)Siobhan Synnot, The Scotsman, 22/09/2013

The odd tone – a Brit-com head with a gritty arthouse heart – won’t be for all tastes, but for the most part, Filth is savagely entertaining: a cathartic, darkly funny portrait of self-destruction.

***(*)(*)John Nugent, The Skinny, 23/09/2013

It has its moments, but in keeping with its Christmas setting all the grotesquery just makes it seem a bit panto.

***(*)(*)Alistair Harkness, The Scotsman, 25/09/2013

With McAvoy acting as if his life depends on it, Filth is the Irvine Welsh film we’ve been waiting years for. Tastier than a deep-fried Mars Bar…

****(*)Jame Mottram, Total Film, 24/09/2013

Easily the most successful adaptation of Irvine Welsh’s work since Trainspotting, Filth is a darkly funny tale of depravation and self-destruction. The extreme approach won’t be for everyone, and the material feels slightly dated in some respects, but James McAvoy holds everything together with a tour de (police) force performance.

***(*)(*)Stephen Carty, Flix Capacitor, 26/09/2013

The film grows increasingly demented and grotesque but beneath the desire to offend lurks an old-fashioned morality tale.

****(*)Allan Hunter, Daily Express, 27/09/2013

A bulked-up James McAvoy dominates the screen in this razor-sharp Glasgow smile of a black comedy, packed with aberrant sex, hard drugs and maximum David Soul.

****(*)Damon Wise, Empire Online, 30/09/2013

If Trainspotting (1996) was a feral, fresh-seeming bacchanal of bad faith – in everything macro-Scottish or micro-British – Filth is the same rave-up held 17 years later.

*(*)(*)(*)(*)Nigel Andrews, Financial Times, 03/10/2013

Filth doesn’t have the formal inventiveness that Boyle brought to Trainspotting. What it does possess is chutzpah.

****(*)Geoffrey Macnab, The Independent, 04/10/2013

While Filth is probably still the second best film of an Irvine Welsh book, it's far closer to The Acid House and Ecstasy than it is Trainspotting.

**(*)(*)(*)Laurence Phelan, The Independent, 04/10/2013

A film this salty is always likely to leave an odd taste in the mouth.

Adam Woodward, Little White Lies, 03/10/2013

For the first half-hour it's got a full-on horrible energy, but there isn't enough humour for it to qualify as comedy, and not enough reality or plausible characterisation to justify calling it any sort of procedural noir.

**(*)(*)(*)Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian, 03/10/2013


Features about Filth (18)

Interview: James McAvoy, Jon S Baird and Eddie Marsan talk Filth

James Mottram, The List, 16/09/2013

Where and when?

General release. Check local listings for show times.

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