Welcome II the Terrordome review dystopian drama offers a bleak vision of Britain – The Guardian

Posted: August 4, 2021 at 2:04 pm

The centrist 90s werent ready for Ngozi Onwurahs Welcome II the Terrordome a confrontational and experimental futurist thriller or hip-hop dystopia, envisioning a Britain whose bigotries have further metastasised in a lawless failed state created by the cruelties of the past.

In an audacious dreamlike opening section, Onwurah reimagines the 1803 Igbo Landing defiance in the US state of Georgia, in which captive Igbo people took their own lives by drowning rather than submit to slavery. Then, using the same cast, Onwurah launches us into a world of oppression still to come, in a bizarre official ghetto for black people somewhere in Britain named Transdean, nicknamed the Terrordome. Here, for the purposes of surveillance and control, the rules about drug manufacture and interracial association are unofficially suspended, like a mix of apartheid South Africas Soweto and Sun City. Gangster Spike (Valentine Nonyela) is living with Jodie (Saffron Burrows), a white woman in flight from an abusive relationship, and Spikes sister Anjela (Suzette Llewellyn) finds herself in confrontation with the police.

This is a movie that resists categorisation: in many ways, it feels like political cinema from an earlier age, a rough-and-ready document in which the Terrordome is something like Godards Alphaville or the alternative New York from Lizzie Bordens Born in Flames. But interestingly, Onwurah is also engaging with more mainstream, commercial cinema and music, aiming to create a film like Escape from New York or Boyz N the Hood: a studio movie made with arthouse resources. At all events, this is a film that wouldnt be pigeonholed. Maybe weve needed a quarter-century for its spiky refusal to compromise to be understood. Its a film that speaks more to 2021 than 1995.

Welcome II the Terrordome is released on 7 August on Mubi.

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Welcome II the Terrordome review dystopian drama offers a bleak vision of Britain - The Guardian

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