Urchin currently has an average rating of 9 out of 10 and has been rated by 1 users on our platform.
A remarkably assured directorial debut with a mesmerising lead.
Read full review at Little White Lies...forgoing pity in favour of illustrating the complex humanity of someone who’s been made to believe they’re not worth saving.
Read full review at Empire...reflects a mature, and frequently harrowing, recognition of how people can be held captive by the centrifugal force of their own behavioral patterns.
Read full review at Indie WireHarris Dickinson makes a terrifically impressive debut here as a writer-director with this smart, thoughtful, compassionate picture about homelessness.
Read full review at The Guardian...sidesteps social-realist cliches in favour of daring invention.
Read full review at The TelegraphBabygirl’s Harris Dickinson announces himself as a gutsy, thoughtful filmmaker.
Read full review at The Independent...stays committed to presenting Mike’s story without frills, recognizing that it’s just a tragically common one of a man spiraling down the drain of society.
Read full review at Roger EbertUrchin‘s London most resembles that of Mike Leigh’s Naked: a city in which vagrants and working poor can exist at the center of the metropolis while remaining curiously disconnected from it.
Read full review at Paste MagazineThe film is most fascinating for its interrogation of its own representation.
Read full review at Slant MagazineHarris Dickinson sticks to the basics with his directorial debut, Urchin, but avoids the talky comedies or stagey dramas that trap so many actors-turned-filmmakers trying to stay simple.
Read full review at The A.V. ClubThis powerful British drama is one of the most accomplished, brilliant debut films in recent memory...
Read full review at Common Sense MediaEn välberättad och tragikomisk film om misstag, missbruk och utanförskap i en modern och fräsch debut.
Read full review at Moviezine