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Cry for Bobo Director: David Cairns
In a Victorian-esque fantasy Britain where clowns are second-class citizens, Bobo and Koko try to break out of their poverty trap by robbing a bank. They manage this - despite their enormous shoes, baggy trousers, etc. - but the plan comes unstuck when they get into their getaway car and the doors all fall off. Stuck in prison, Bobo learns that his wife and child - also clowns of course with the full make-up and costume - are despairing of their miserable life and considering running away to join the civil service. With the aid of his friend Koko, Bobo stages a break-out from jail to get his family back.
The performances are uniformly excellent: I’m not sure who plays who under all that make-up, but Steven McNicoll (Bobo? Koko?) was in Atletico Partick, Mark McDonnell (Koko? Bobo?) is Alby Brook on the Big Finish Dalek Empire CDs, and both were in a BBC Scotland comedy sketch series called Velvet Soup. Also watch out for James Bryce (Petrie in The Insidious Dr Fu Manchu) as a shopkeeper. Cry for Bobo is beautifully written, directed and produced and works on every level, as knockabout silliness, as a serious satire on racial intolerance, and as a visually sumptuous, technically perfect short film. This is an absolute must-see. MJS rating: A+ | ||
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