Film Review: 12 Years A Slave

As a contemporary visual artist, Steve McQueen ploughed his own furrow.
Undated Film Still Handout from 12 Years A Slave. Pictured: Chiwetel Ejiofor. See PA Feature FILM Film Reviews. Picture credit should read: PA Photo/Entertainment One. WARNING: This picture must only be used to accompany PA Feature FILM Film Reviews.Undated Film Still Handout from 12 Years A Slave. Pictured: Chiwetel Ejiofor. See PA Feature FILM Film Reviews. Picture credit should read: PA Photo/Entertainment One. WARNING: This picture must only be used to accompany PA Feature FILM Film Reviews.
Undated Film Still Handout from 12 Years A Slave. Pictured: Chiwetel Ejiofor. See PA Feature FILM Film Reviews. Picture credit should read: PA Photo/Entertainment One. WARNING: This picture must only be used to accompany PA Feature FILM Film Reviews.

He collected the coveted Turner Prize in 1999, ahead of bookie’s favourite Tracey Emin, for three pieces including a video work Deadpan in which he recreated the falling house stunt from the Buster Keaton silent film Steamboat Bill Jr.

In 2006, McQueen responded powerfully to the war in Iraq by representing the portraits of fallen British soldiers as a sheet of stamps entitled Queen And Country.

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When he made the transition to feature-length films, McQueen was equally uncompromising.

Undated Film Still Handout from 12 Years A Slave. Pictured: Chiwetel Ejiofor. See PA Feature FILM Film Reviews. Picture credit should read: PA Photo/Entertainment One. WARNING: This picture must only be used to accompany PA Feature FILM Film Reviews.Undated Film Still Handout from 12 Years A Slave. Pictured: Chiwetel Ejiofor. See PA Feature FILM Film Reviews. Picture credit should read: PA Photo/Entertainment One. WARNING: This picture must only be used to accompany PA Feature FILM Film Reviews.
Undated Film Still Handout from 12 Years A Slave. Pictured: Chiwetel Ejiofor. See PA Feature FILM Film Reviews. Picture credit should read: PA Photo/Entertainment One. WARNING: This picture must only be used to accompany PA Feature FILM Film Reviews.

His bravura debut Hunger recounted the story of Bobby Sands (Michael Fassbender) through the eyes of fellow Irish Republican prisoners while his incendiary 2011 follow-up, Shame, dealt candidly with sex addiction.

For his third feature,

McQueen considers the slave trade from the perspective of a free black man, who was kidnapped in 1841 and suffered 12 years of abuse on the plantations of Louisiana before he was reunited with his family.

Based on the autobiography by Solomon Northup and adapted for the screen by John Ridley, 12 Years A Slave is a masterpiece that sears into the retina with every artfully composed frame.

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Solomon (Chiwetel Ejiofor) lives with his wife Anne (Kelsey Scott), daughter Margaret (Quvenzhane Wallis) and son Alonzo (Cameron Zeigler).

An encounter with two seemingly respectable gentlemen – Messrs Brown (Scoot McNairy) and Hamilton (Taran Killam) – changes Solomon’s life forever. He wakes up in chains to find he has been sold into slavery.

Solomon’s first master, Ford (Benedict Cumberbatch), is kind but fate delivers the lead character to sadistic Edwin Epps (Michael

Fassbender).

Epps takes a shine to one of the slave girls, Patsey (Lupita Nyong’o), to the chagrin of his unfeeling wife (Sarah Paulson).

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Solomon is caught in the crossfire, finding a means to orchestrate escape with the help of an abolitionist called Bass (Brad Pitt), who also believes that “slavery is an evil that should befall none”.

12 Years A Slave is the deserved frontrunner for Best Picture at this year’s Oscars and it would be impossible to deny McQueen’s film an entire mantelpiece of gold statuettes.

Ejiofor breaks our hearts as an honest, decent man, who retains his humanity in the face of unspeakable cruelty, and Nyong’o is eye-catching in her big screen debut.

McQueen’s directorial brio comes to the fore, memorably in a horrific whipping sequence shot in a single take.

It’s not a film that demands repeat viewings – like a sledgehammer to the solar plexus, once is enough.

But McQueen’s sensitive yet unflinching portrait of suffering will stay with us forever.

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