User Reviews

Review this title
2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
10/10
excellent, investigative filmmaking at its very best!
ivosmith_gypsy19 October 2011
This is a very powerful investigative film, which I hope will change for the better the lives of many Gypsy small children that are ruthlessly exploited through begging on the streets of Britain. It features two small children – a girl and a boy, "Alice" and "Lou" – both around the age of 4. Day in and day out they are forced to beg for long hours in Central London. The filmmakers follow them, and 50 other Romanian Gypsy children exploited through begging over a period of 8 months, painstakingly gathering evidence of their exploitation through some extraordinary surveillance footage. Babies are used too as begging props by women who beg relentlessly. The film raises awareness about the plight of many children trapped in a vicious circle of exploitation, perpetrated not only by organised crime, as the police claims, but by the kids' own families, too – as this programme proves it. The situation of the Gypsies in Romania is key to understanding why this is going on and the truth behind child-begging. The problem is born out of poverty and discrimination and is fuelled by greed. The authorities don't know how to deal with it, but if something is not done soon, an entire generation of Gypsy children will be lost. This is investigative journalism at its very best. Well done, Panorama! As a Romani, I particularly applaud the Romanian Gypsy Right campaigner who says in the film that the time has come for us to speak out about our exploitation that goes on in our own community. Indeed it has! Watch this film, it deserves an award!
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A good example of racist demonization
ersbel17 August 2015
It is called Britain's Child Beggars Special. But somehow they are all Roma. Of course, there is a talking head giving details. Some times shown on screen, other times probably invented to increase the drama.

As any good propaganda the people are demonized. The viewer does get to know the people through their bad action which are carefully picked: the child urinates in a telephone cabin, one of the young girls steals. Yet the harassment that turns the older beggars aggressive is carefully edited out: see? they are evil.

I have seen quite a few of this kind of racist profiling movies lately, but this disgusted me in particular. These vulnerable women and girls were repeatedly exposed as thieves, "fake Muslims", liars in a city that has Islamist patrols active on the streets. But hey, the end justifies the means, right?

Contact me with Questions, Comments or Suggestions ryitfork @ bitmail.ch
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed