Watching a play online may take us back to the miserable theatre-deprived days of the COVID pandemic, but one of the things that we did learn from that experience was how streaming digital theatre has a future beyond being simply a replacement for The Live Event. Tom Powell’s The Silence and the Noise originally toured the UK with English Touring Theatre in 2021/22, for which he won a Papatango Prize. He subsequently adapted it for film, and this production, shot entirely externally, premiered at the Vault Festival earlier this year and won two awards at the Broadstairs International Film Festival (Best Film and Best Actor) in November 2023. Having been re-released online it is now available for anyone to stream and watch for free – link at the bottom of the review!
Ben and Daize are still both at school – but that’s where their comparative innocence ends. He’s a drug runner, at the beck and call of the never-seen Beetle, a man who runs his operation with brutal ruthlessness, who has no qualms about dishing out violent retribution against Ben if he makes any mistakes, and who controls Ben’s brain to the extent that Ben is convinced he has earned £11,000 for his work, but that Beetle is temporarily looking after it for him; hashtag #yeahright.
Daize meanwhile has a mother who is a drug addict; incapable of anything other than getting drug deliveries and administering it. There’s no one to care for Daize, who is reduced to living off cat food in the garden whilst still trying to do well at school. In an attempt to protect her mother and stop her from getting more drugs she arms herself with a knife to ward off any drug runner who tries to come near her – and that’s how she and Ben meet.
Over the next few weeks we see how their friendship grows, despite Daize’s disapproval of and contempt for Ben’s activities. She belittles him for being Beetle’s “little dog”, but when she sees the knife wounds on his chest caused by the angry and revengeful Beetle, she can’t help herself from doing that thing that takes us all back to our childhoods – she kisses it better. He says you have to learn from your mistakes, but does he? She issues an ultimatum for their continuing friendship – give the drug running up within the next month. But he’s trapped – can he break free from Beetle’s control? You’ll have to watch it to find out!
This is an intense two-hander; with Ben and Daize constantly in each other’s company and sometimes very close camera work, it strongly gives you that sense that there is nowhere to hide. Tom Powell’s script pulls no punches with exploring the devastation that drugs can bring to everyone involved in the supply chain, but it’s done with an eloquent beauty and frequent poetic insights that help us place these two sad young people in the wider environment; both victims in their own way, and facing adult problems far in advance of their age, you do get occasional glimpses of the fact that they are just kids. Despite the wretched brutality of their existence, there is a gallows humour about it all too; it’s also heartwarming and – no spoilers – there is the suggestion of some cause for optimism at the end.
It’s superbly performed by two of our best young actors. Rachelle Diedericks, whom I’m proud to say I first noticed five years ago as a brilliant young talent in The Band, and was a powerful Catherine in Headlong’s recent View from the Bridge, plays Daize with an excellent combination of terrified courage and helplessness, trying so hard to hang onto some elements of her youth in the face of true desperation.
William Robinson, fantastic in the RSC’s recent Julius Caesar, and giving a five-star performance as Darren in Bacon at the Edinburgh Fringe this year, excels as Ben, his confidence petering out with every setback and his vulnerability overwhelming his otherwise brash veneer.
Powerful and thought-provoking, The Silence and the Noise takes a serious subject and explores it seriously, whilst never losing sight of the youthfulness of our protagonists. And these two excellent performances will now never be lost as they are digitally preserved for ever! Highly recommended.
You can watch the play for free until March 2024 here.
Image credits: Luke Collins/Pentabus and Rural Media












