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乔·康沃尔and John Boyega Talk PotentialAttack the BlockSequel!

Franz Drameh, Alex Esmail, Leeon Jones, and John Boyega in Attack the Block (2011)

John Boyega will always be Moses fromAttack the Blockto me. The 2011 film is what a lot of people my age know him from, sinceAttack the Blockwas lauded for its humanizing depiction of kids growing up in project housing. The film ended with enough room for there to be another, and it sounds like a sequel is already being discussed.

InAttack the Block, we start with a South London teen gang made up of Moses (Boyega), Pest, Dennis, Jerome, and Biggz, mugging a female nurse named Sam (Jodie Whittaker, who would end up becoming the 13th Doctor). During the mugging, an alien crashes into a car. The boys follow it and kill it after it attacks Moses. However, they soon find out that this alien was only the first to come, and more follow, hunting the boys. Now, the kids, Sam, and a few others have to team up in order to save the block.

The film’s writer and director, Joe Cornish, had this to say about anAttack the Blocksequel during theScript Apartpodcast:

We’ve got ideas. I met with John a couple of months ago to talk about it. We’ve always had ideas since after the first one, but obviously we’ve both been busy doing different things. In a weird way, kinda, the longer you leave it the more interesting it is. So that’s what I’ll say.

The film was a debut for Cornish and Boyega, so of course it makes sense that they would come together to think about what a followup story would be. I loveAttack the Block. It’s funny, dark, and doesn’t pull any punches when it comes to setting up the stakes of how bloodthirsty these aliens are. What’s more is that despite the opening sequence painting the boys in a malicious light, the film spends the majority of its time showing that these arekids—kids who, when push comes to shove, look out for and protect each other and their home.

John Boyega also sent out these following tweets, getting us even more excited:

Attack the Blockunderperformed when it first came out, despite great reviews and its status as a cult classic. Plus, it also takes time to drop moments like when Moses speculates why the aliens are there and targeting them:

Know what I reckon, yeah? I reckon the feds sent them anyway. Government probably bred those creatures to kill Black boys. First they sent drugs to The Ends. Then they sent guns. Now they send monsters to get us. They don’t care, man. We ain’t killing each other fast enough, so they decided to speed up the process.

When I saw this movie at an outdoor event with two of my friends, we heard some white people chuckling at this line, but we recognized the poignancy in it. While this is not the case in the movie, that mentality is one a lot of Black people across the diaspora feel, because it feels like we are always under attack by the government.

If you haven’t seen the film, I highly recommend checking it out. Although, I will warn you, it’ll only make you more frustrated at Boyega’s wasted potential inStar Wars.

(via/Film, image: Screen Gems)

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Princess (she/her-bisexual) is a Brooklyn born Megan Fox truther, who loves Sailor Moon, mythology, and diversity within sci-fi/fantasy. Still lives in Brooklyn with her over 500 Pokémon that she has Eevee trained into a mighty army. Team Zutara forever.