Film review: Adulthood

ADULTHOOD (18)**DIRECTED BY: NOEL CLARKESTARRING: NOEL CLARK, SCARLETT ALICE JOHNSON, ADAM DEACON

LIKELY to fuel, reflect and benefit from the current hysteria surrounding Britain's knife culture, this sequel to 2006's Kidulthood sees writer/star Noel Clarke graduating to directing duties with another ripped-from-the-headlines story about West London's patois-spewing, law-bothering youth.

Set six years on from the day-from-hell depicted first time out, the original's ASBO-flaunting kids are now in that tricky, can-be-tried-as-adult phase of their lives, something that has convinced some of them to turn their backs on their nihilistic ways and sucked others deeper into the mire.

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Determined to walk away from all of it – if he can – is Sam (Clarke), who has had his nave bad-man fronting swagger thoroughly kicked out of him during a prison stretch for manslaughter. Unfortunately, his plans for a quiet life are ruined by the news that someone has put a hit out on him on his first day of freedom.

With an incident-packed 24-hour-timeframe, Clarke injects proceedings with a suitably raw energy and draws out a couple of decent performances from his cast, not least himself. But as with Kidulthood, once you cut through the street speak incomprehensible to-anyone over 22 , it's still clich-ridden, histrionic and equally guilty of both glorifying the urban realities it is supposedly reflecting and wagging a disapproving finger at them.

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