Big Boys Don’t Cry review – a former abuse victim confronts his harrowing childhood

حوالي ٣ سنوات فى The guardian

Based on true events, the lasting impact of trauma suffered at a children’s home are examined in this painful British crime dramaThis painful British drama part-fictionalises the life of Paul Connolly, abandoned in a dustbin as a two-week-old baby and then later abused at the notorious St Leonard’s children’s home in Essex. The effects of childhood brutality and the cost of growing up being told you’re nothing: it’s all there in This Is England actor Michael Socha’s performance as Connolly in adulthood, a violent man carrying invisible scars.We first meet Connolly as a child of about 11 or 12 (played by newcomer Mitchell Norman). “You’ll end up in prison,” screams one of his carers. This is Bill Starling, who was jailed for 14 years in 2001 for a string of sexual assaults and rapes against children – his youngest victim was just five. We watch a night-time raid on a dorm by paedophile staff, grabbing boys out of their beds “for a bit of fun”. The film isn’t particularly graphic; it doesn’t have to be. Shots of skinny, pale, underfed boys with their shrinking, defeated body language do the job. Connolly spent 12 years living at St Leonard’s. He was never raped but suffered beatings. Continue reading...

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