What makes a Rom a “gypsy” and effectively automatically a “snotty brat”? Perhaps no other fiction feature sheds light on the phenomenon of everyday ordinary antiziganism as powerfully and straightforwardly as BRATS, which seems at first to want nothing more than to be a film about affection and family. The problems of Marek and Monika are the same as those of other parents. They move out to the country to give their children – one biological and two adopted ones – more space. Alas, a broken windshield triggers tempers, hate and fighting and leads the boys and their parents to a radical questioning of their identity.
What makes a Rom a “gypsy” and effectively automatically a “snotty brat”? Perhaps no other fiction feature sheds light on the phenomenon of everyday ordinary antiziganism as powerfully and straightforwardly as BRATS, which seems at first to want nothing more than to be a film about affection and family. The problems of Marek and Monika are the same as those of other parents. They move out to the country to give their children – one biological and two adopted ones – more space. Alas, a broken windshield triggers tempers, hate and fighting and leads the boys and their parents to a radical questioning of their identity.