Sam Adewunmi is charismatic as a Nigerian-British foster child forced back to the inner city in Shola Amoo’s second film
This sombre, yet heartfelt and warmly acted drama is from Shola Amoo, whose 2016 debut was the engaging docudrama A Moving Image, about communities in Brixton, south London. The Last Tree is about a Nigerian-British boy called Femi (played as a young kid by Tai Golding, and as an older teenager by Sam Adewunmi) who was fostered out to Mary (Denise Black), a carer in the countryside, because of unspecified problems suffered by Femi’s mum – a strong performance from Gbemisola Ikumelo.
Ten-year-old Femi lives a happy, idyllic existence in this rural place, but it is all shattered when his mum shows up, now ready to take him back, and poor Femi has no choice but to comply, despite Mary having given a promise that he need never leave her. Femi now moves to a tough
London neighbourhood and he finds that his mum is an old-school strict disciplinarian who thinks nothing of hitting him with a stick.