Payback Season
Payback Season is a British drama film written by Danny Donnelly and Jenny Fitzpatrick that was released to cinemas on 9 March 2012. The film was directed by Danny Donnelly, and stars Adam Deacon, Nichola Burley and Leo Gregory.[1][2][3]
Payback Season | |
---|---|
Directed by | Danny Donnelly |
Written by | Danny Donnelly & Jenny Fitzpatrick |
Produced by | Danny Donnelly John Adams Justin King |
Starring | Adam Deacon Nichola Burley David Ajala Leo Gregory Anna Popplewell Geoff Hurst |
Cinematography | James Martin |
Edited by | Oliver Parker |
Production companies | Pure Film Productions Angry Badger Pictures |
Distributed by | Revolver Entertainment |
Release date |
|
Running time | 88 mins. |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Plot
Jerome (Adam Deacon) is a successful young footballer, who is in the midst of playing the most important season of his career. When he goes to visit his mom on the housing estate he grew up on, he accidentally bumps into some of his old childhood friends, led by drug dealing loanshark and gangster Baron (David Ajala). Jerome offers to take the lads on a night out - but Baron, living in jealousy of Jerome's success, takes advantage of the situation and asks him for £10,000 to tide over his cashflow problem. Jerome agrees to give him the money, but no sooner does he do so, when he finds that Baron has enlisted his younger brother Aaron (Liam Donnelly) to help him on a hit. When he confronts Baron, Baron informs him that in order to keep his brother safe, he will need to stump up another £10,000. Not realising that he is being blackmailed, Jerome agrees. A week later, Baron threatens him for more money. Realising that he is being taken for a mug, he enlists the help of his trainer Andy (Leo Gregory) to inform Baron that he won't be getting any more money. However, the warning soon backfires on Jerome when Baron trashes his car and attacks Andy with a knife, leaving him in intensive care. With no choice but to put a stop to Baron, Jerome arrives at his flat to confront him, only to be stabbed in the leg by Baron in the process. With time slowly running out, the arrival of one of Baron's heavies stops a fight between the two. Baron orders him to shoot Jerome, only for him to shoot Baron before running away. Jerome is left on the floor, breathing heavily.
Cast
- Adam Deacon as Jerome Davies
- Nichola Burley as Lisa Lovell
- David Ajala as Baron
- Leo Gregory as Andy Sullivan
- Geoff Hurst as Adam Aveley
- Anna Popplewell as Izzy Jacobs
- Nina Young as Sandra Davies
- Liam Donnelly as Aaron Davies
- Billy Seymour as Social
- Ike Hamilton as Blag
- Bronson Webb as Brooksy
- Arnold Oceng as Maxy
- Alex Esmail as Leon
- Patreis Donnelly as Chris
- Sinead Moynihan as Charlotte
- Danny Young as Ian
- Daniel Burten-Shaw as Ben
- Kelly Wenham as Melissa
- Louisa Lytton as Keisha
- Zaraah Abrahams as Clarissa
- DJ Spoony as Club Host
- Chloe Saxon as herself
- Stephanie Siadatan as Katy
- Kylie Hutchsinson as Jolana
- Joshua Osei as Peter
- Beau Baptist as Reese
- Phil Island as Danny
Production
In August 2011, Geoff Hurst signed on to play the part of a football agent, making this his first role in a feature film.[3][4]
Critical reception
Variety wrote that the film was "let down by generic material that's light on both action and persuasive plotting",[1] but offered that a later edited release may be more successful.[1] View Auckland panned the film and its director, and wrote that the film was "poorly directed and often excruciating to watch",[2] with both a simplistic script and "an awkward central performance from BAFTA Rising Star Adam Deacon."[2] They felt that while Deacon was fine when in "wise-cracking support roles or weaselly scumbags",[2] he was "nobody's idea of a charismatic leading man, let alone a Premiership footballer."[2] They did note that while the performances of Leo Gregory and David Ayala were strong, co-star Nichola Burley's part was unconvincing and Anna Popplewell's was "shockingly bad."[2] The Observer also panned the film, describing it as a "poorly directed, badly written, inadequately acted" film, in which "nothing rings true, not even the tones on the characters' mobile phones."[5] The Independent awarded it 2 out of 5 stars but praised David Ajala's performance for its "intensity, menace and humour".[6]
References
- Gant, Charles (8 March 2012). "review: Payback Season". Variety. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- Turner, Matthew (11 March 2012). "The ViewAuckland Review". View Auckland. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- Child, Ben (4 August 2011). "Sir Geoff Hurst crosses the line into film with acting role". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- staff (4 August 2011). "Sir Geoff Hurst to play agent in football film". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- French, Philip (10 March 2012). "review: Payback Season". The Observer. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- Macnab, Geoffrey (9 March 2012). "review: Payback Season". The Independent. Archived from the original on 25 May 2022. Retrieved 10 May 2012.