Shot in a pseudo-documentary
style from the perspectives of three different characters, Gypo is the
first official UK Dogme95 film. The Dogme style involves using a handheld camera,
location shooting, no sets or special lighting, etc. The design is to create a
very realistic and believable film, a goal they have met very well here. The
production focuses on a working class family in seaside Kent, England. Helen (Pauline
McLynn) works nights at the supermarket and is barely on speaking terms with her
bigoted, bitter husband Paul (Paul McGann). She's desperate for a break from the
monotony of her life. One day their daughter Kelly (Tamzin Dunstone) brings
home a new friend, a young Roma/Gypsy refugee from the Czech Republic who lives
with her mother (Rula Lenska, "Footballers
Wives") in a caravan park. Tasha (Chloe Sirene) is the spark Helen has
been waiting for, and the two begin an unlikely romance. The film is also
an up close and personal look at violence towards immigrants and the Roma/ Gypsies
(for whom "Gypo" is a pejorative term). This type of filmmaking really
relies on the performances, and McLynn is wonderful as Helen, creating a character
for the audience to care about as she finds some independence in her life by taking
an unexpected road with Tasha.
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