MovieChat Forums > New Boy (2009) Discussion > Just saw it at the Tribeca Film Festival

Just saw it at the Tribeca Film Festival


Saw this film along with 5 others as part of the "Off the Beaten Path" shorts. I was impressed, to say the least. A simple story rendered powerful with just the right amount of plot and scenes.

The child actors were all wonderful, and the dialogue was great.

I would say the best short of the few it played with.

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And, I agree with this reviewer too ....basically:

I recently saw this at the 2008 Palm Springs International Short Fest. This comedy-drama is a story about a nine year old African boy, Joseph (Olutunji Ebun-Cole who has fled a war-torn nation and is experiencing his first day of school in Ireland and the natural difficulties of an outsider fitting in. Norma Sheahan is the teacher keeping order, Sinead Maguire is Hazel O'Hara the sympathetic classmate, and Fionn O'Shea and Simon O'Driscall are Seth Quinn and Christian Kelly the classroom bullies. This award winning short is the third short from writer/director Stephanie Green. Green adapted the story from the short story New Boy by novelist Roddy Doyle, best known for The Commitments, from his new book The Deportees and Other Stories. The story is told with flashbacks of Joseph's schooling in Africa. This is a good film with nice performances from the child actors and exasperated teacher and the central story moves along at a fast pace that the flashback scenes don't slow down resulting in an even balanced film. I would give this a 7.0 out of 10 and recommend it.


The ONE false note was the easily exasperated teacher and how she was portrayed as being just a whingeing stereotype.

I mean, if one realllly had enough experience teaching at a school, such as she had, then one would NOT have been so easily put out at the kids' antics, no? The teacher seemed to be a bit a game player herself, really

The kids were just great ...acting-wise, they were quite unaffected, to my mind.


SPOILER ...... SPOILER ....... SPOILER ....... SPOILER ......


And, how ironic was the ending to the film, when the one student (the well-meaning glasses-wearing, figgy-pudding-y, truth-teller, Hazel) who could have told Teacher what really went down, and possibly indicted the true wrong-doers, was herself punished ... which lead to the band of three boys, becoming friends? Yeesh, I didn't see that one coming ... Did you?
I hadn't thought, that in fairly prejudiced Ireland, that ANY Black boy had a prayer of being accepted, especially in so short a time!

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^^
"fairly prejudiced Ireland" - explain

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rochie,

Read my reply to the OP, again please. What I meant by what I posted should be obvious.

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