ADULT LIFE SKILLS Film Review & Trailer.
Directed By Rachel Tunnard
Genre: Comedy
Rachel Tunnard’s debut feature ADULT LIFE SKILLS is a quirky, witty and also moving film about grief and identity.
Anna (an endearingly off-centre Jodie Whittaker from Broadchurch) has been living absurdly like a teenager in a shed in her mother’s garden since her twin, Billy, died eighteen months ago. She is still stuck in paralyzing grief, missing their close relationship and continuing on her own to make the jokey space-age thumb videos (with drawn-on faces, having conversations) they used to make together.
She cycles to work though glorious rolling Peak District landscapes to a dead-end job at a small outdoor activities centre run by Alice (Alice Lowe, star of Sightseers and Black Mountain Poets). The threat of her thirtieth birthday is coming up. She can’t celebrate it without Billy and she wonders if she’s still a twin now that he’s dead. Her plain-speaking mother (Lorraine Ashbourne) gives her the ultimatum that it’s time for her to move out of the shed and into a flat of her own and get on with her life. Anna isn’t ready. Then her best friend Fiona (exuberant Rachel Deering) returns from a year in Thailand and tries to jolly her out of her reclusiveness with a night out to recapture their teens. And she has to look after the little boy next door, cowboy-obsessed Clint (Ozzy Myers, a stetson-hatted old head on young shoulders), while his mother is in hospital. He is troubled but he has a child’s knack of speaking the truth and their growing relationship, despite Anna’s reluctance, helps her come to terms with her grief and decide to grow up.
It’s an impressive feature debut for Rachel Tunnard who has directed, written and edited this expansion of her award-winning short film Emotional Fusebox, made with the same actors. It’s full of lovely details, such as Anna’s pairing up of single shoes found by the side of the road, the bra in the microwave, woolly hats a-plenty and there’s a slight sag in the middle where it shows signs of being stretched out.
Performances are excellent. Grandma (Eileen Davies, from Sightseers) also lives in the house and the relationship between the three generations of women in the household is comically acerbic. Local estate agent and aspiring author Brendan (Brett Goldstein) is funny and nice, but Anna is so wrapped up in her grief that she doesn’t realise he’s been in love with her since school. He’s the one who comes up with the whimsical thought that, like Brownie badges that are earned, adults should be given life skills badges for completing adult tasks, such as sending back a meal in a restaurant.
View ADULT LIFE SKILLS on Amazon Prime Video
Alexa Dalby