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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Leslie Felperin

Orthodox review – absurd tale of a Jewish boxer on the ropes

Michael Smiley, left, as Shannon and Stephen Graham as Benjamin in Orthodox.
Michael Smiley, left, as Shannon and Stephen Graham as Benjamin in Orthodox. Photograph: Dean Rogers/Orthodox Films Ltd

This gloomily lit drama (shot in Newcastle, seemingly on the darkest day of the year, with only a sputtering 20w bulb for illumination) revolves around Benjamin (Stephen Graham), who was once a proud son of an Orthodox Jewish community but now finds himself on the edges of its society. Benjamin has been semi cast out for pursuing his passion for boxing – now indulged for money in grubby illegal bare-knuckle fights – and for marrying a non-Jew (Rebecca Callard). He reaps yet more grief when he agrees to help his slimy goy manager (Michael Smiley) burn down a slum property, owned, it just so happens, by the menacing leader of the Orthodox community (Christopher Fairbank, channelling a cross between Don Corleone and Fagin).

It’s absurd material, very obviously overstretched, beyond breaking point, from its origins as a short. But Graham is as watchable as always, even when working with this tattered script.

Orthodox trailer
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