Top Boy

2011

Seasons & Episodes

  • 2
  • 1
8.4| TV-MA| en| More Info
Released: 31 October 2011 Ended
Producted By: Cowboy Films
Country: United Kingdom
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website: https://www.netflix.com/title/70236561
Info

A thrilling and raw crime drama following a gang of drug dealers in Hackney, London - an honest and gripping rendition of inner-city drug and gang culture.

Genre

Drama

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Top Boy (2011) is now streaming with subscription on Netflix

Director

Production Companies

Cowboy Films

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Top Boy Audience Reviews

ThiefHott Too much of everything
VeteranLight I don't have all the words right now but this film is a work of art.
SpunkySelfTwitter It’s an especially fun movie from a director and cast who are clearly having a good time allowing themselves to let loose.
Curapedi I cannot think of one single thing that I would change about this film. The acting is incomparable, the directing deft, and the writing poignantly brilliant.
kosmasp So far I could only watch the first two seasons, because they are the only ones available. But as season 2 ends, it is very obvious that there has to be more. Or at least there was more planned. And all indicates that there might be more coming. But until that happens, all we can talk about are the first two seasons. Though some may feel that 4 episodes are not enough to be called a season. Whatever the case, the production is really good.The language is on spot, the characters are believable and there is enough drama to hold everything together. Now it may not be as thorough as "The Wire", but its microcosmos still works. Relationships are explored and everything connects more or less. It also does not hold back on the punches, which is really good. Shocking and sometimes frustrating and not really meant to root for everyone involved, this is classy nevertheless
Joe Day Like The Wire, this shows purports to show us the real-life down and dirty live of London - again. How many depressing films must we see about the endless housing projects of London, Ireland, Scotland? Story after story on how Brits lie around on welfare while the kids run amuck; parents - any adult - is corruptible towards children too. Nary a decent role model in sight. And of course, these are predominately black people or some other "minority" who were are told (even though some obviously have decent families) that they are society's outcasts in need of a father figure which they get where - the gang!!!Spike Lee and countless others have told the story - the "new" and continuing "Boys n the Hood." It is all very sleazy. And the boys wear their trousers saggy but every effort is made to portray them as heterosexual. Even setting them up with hookers. What a laugh.The players make stupid mistake after stupid mistake in judgment. I caught this on NetFlix and made it to Season 2. The shark-jumping episode with DuShane and his lawyer made me shut off the set. It made absolutely no sense whatsoever. I do not even care what happened next. Just overall, a very depressing show.
tieman64 "Follow the money." - Deep Throat "Top Boy", a four part television series, was touted as Britain's answer to "The Wire". Though further instalments are planned, the series currently lacks the latter's socio-political scope.Written by Ronan Bennett, the series takes place in an East London estate and attempts to follow the lives of various drug dealers, unemployed youths, gangsters, criminals, youth workers, adults and children. Bennett captures the allure, even necessity, of criminality, the way a lack of adult role-models influences underprivileged youths and the overwhelming effects external factors have on mental health, but his series is too reliant on stock characters and stock scenarios, and too heavily ignores larger social, structural and systemic forces.Today, poverty is an escalating product of our economic system. In Britain, sixty five percent of the poor are not in work (Britain has gone beyond breeding poverty at home to exporting poverty abroad). 13.5 million are deemed income poor, thanks in part to deindustrialization, the destruction of trade unions and public sector cuts. Worse still, tax changes over the past 2 decades have put a higher burden of tax on the poor. Beyond this, however, is an understanding that certain levels of unemployment are desirable, acceptable and necessary. Full employment results in inflation, it is cheaper to pay benefits and maintain an underclass than lifting them out of poverty, a perpetual pool of unemployed allows employers to lower wages and, nationally, there are not enough jobs anyway (there are 5 persons for every 1 job). Ignoring the fact that most jobs are useless, conscious executive decisions are made every day to keep Britain's underclass out of work, in crime, poor and off the radar. This, it is believed, is good for the economy and keeps the wheels moving. Deal with the poor/marginalised and the whole shape of society collapses.But "Top Boy", content to remain at the level of melodrama, isn't concerned about the unseen currents influencing its cast. Instead Bennett has us watch as a local gang goes through a "rags to riches" narrative, while a local boy does his best to keep himself out of criminality. It's common stuff, but Bennett nevertheless does put his own spin on the material. For example, our gangsters are woefully inept, botching most of their jobs. Bennett also paints murky, moral waters, teasing out "good behaviour" on both sides of the law and watching as these ethical actions have extreme, unpredictable results. In this regard, the "top boy" of the series' title alludes to a myriad of things: a good kid (aka a top boy) who stays out of trouble but whose kindly actions result in criminality, a local gangster who hopes to become a top crime-lord but who must reconcile personal ethics, friendship and morality with a violent career path, a reformed criminal whose ethical behaviour gets him killed etc etc. There are few clean moral lines here.The series doesn't aim for social realism or attempt to capture the "kitchen sink" or "cinema verite" tone of British working class movies of the 1960s and 70s. Instead, director Yann Demange goes for a more stylised look, part Michael Mann, part Wong Kar-Wai or Hong Kong cinema, complete with a gorgeous Brian Eno soundtrack and moody, atmospheric cinematography. Immaculate attention is also paid to casting, costume and art design, and the film's carefully chosen locations, something woefully overlooked in British television, are splendid and often architecturally interesting.But such heavy stylisation, so lush, romanticised and precious, comes at the price of authenticity. These characters do not speak like East Londoners and do not behave like London's underclass. The series does not capture the tempo of the streets, the truth of crime, the drumbeat of the estates, the daily activities, nuances, manners, lingo, lifestyles, garments, troubles, worries, actions and relationships of those it purports to depict. It is all very obviously the product of an outsider, a writer and a stylist. It's romanticised and fetishized and simply doesn't ring true. Why does everyone seem so well educated, well spoken, fashionable, good looking, brooding and introspective? Why must we romanticise the poor before empathising with them? Think how "horribly" the working class characters of Britain's "kitchen sink" period were portrayed, yet audiences were treated as being adult enough to empathise with them. And where are the police? Why is everyone in such well furnished homes and apartments? Where are the people? What happens in the schools? Why does everyone have so few relationships? Why are the estates so desolate? Why aren't we following the money? Why aren't we chartering the policies? Have we been spoilt by "The Wire"? Are we being too quick to judge "Top Boy"?Still, what the series lacks in scope it makes up in style. You want a stylish crime drama, you've got a stylish crime drama, and one of the better productions put out by Channel 4 this year.8.5/10 – Worth one viewing. See "Murder on a Sunday Morning", "Paradise Lost 1 and 2" and "The Wire".
Jackson Booth-Millard I noticed this in an article and from the teaser adverts and said to myself that I would try it and hope it would be as interesting viewing as similar gripping teenage drama based films and dramas, e.g. Kidulthood, This Is England, Fish Tank, and I am glad I stuck with it. From the director of Dead Set, basically, set in Hackney, East London, on the Summerhouse housing estate, this follows a group of mostly black British people in the community who all, in some way or another, get involved with gangster style crime, gang culture and underground drug dealing and business. We follow thirteen year old Ra'Nell (introducing Malcolm Kamulete) and his friend who are pulled into helping in the illegal acts, Dushane (Bullet Boy's Ashley Walters) who runs the underground drug business with his friend Sully (Kane Robinson), along with their top don partner Bobby Raikes (Green Street's Geoff Bell), until he is killed, and originally pregnant Heather (Fish Tank's Kierston Wareing) who is growing a load of marijuana in a secret hideout to sell off. The events in the story are all dramatic, such as the occasionally killing of people and even a dog that is hanged, the affect of the drugs business are seen in many cases whether it is the people who care for the young characters highly concerned or those who do it, and we see the occasional weapons and fighting used. Also starring Sharon Duncan Brewster as Lisa, Nicholas Pinnock as Leon, Giacomo Mancini as Gem, Shone Romulus as Dris, Sean Sagar as Tareek, Letitia Wright as Chantelle, George Wood as Andre, Olivia Musangi as Precious and Benedict Wong as Vincent. If you like seeing young people and teenagers emotionally and physically tortured with their appalling life decisions and delving into illegal and wrong actions, like I have seen so many times in media, then this British drama series is definitely worth catching. Good!