Uplifting yet overly simplistic comedy tale of West
Indian immigrants in 1960s England discovering attitudes are anything
but cricket in writer-director Paul Morrison's look back at the small-minded
prejudices of the time. Contrived and occasionally sentimental, Wondrous
Oblivion is doubtless hoping to replicate the youngster obsessed by
sport contends with racism in the same wistful manner as Bend It Like
Beckham.
Eleven year old David Wiseman (Sam Smith) is passionate about cricket
but no good at it. He has all the kit but none of the skill, and he's
a laughing stock at school. So when a Jamaican family move in next
door and build a cricket net in the back garden, David is in seventh
heaven. David is soon receiving coaching from the father of the family,
Dennis (Delroy Lindo), who also attracts the boy's repressed mother
Ruth (Emily Woof).
But this is a poor South London suburb in the 1960s, and when the
neighbours start to make life difficult for the new arrivals, David's
Jewish family is caught in the middle, and the wide-eyed innocent
has to choose between fitting in and standing up for his newfound
friends whose warmth and generosity have turned his world upside down.