Brenda Blethyn puts in a tour-de-force performance as a middle-aged vaudevillian whose day
and audience are both in decline. Added to this she has a failed marriage, an oily paramour
and two sons who are becoming more interested in girls than mum.
In a further complication, one son, Mark, has a handicap. Played to perfection by newcomer
Richard Wilson, Mark steals every scene he is in. Meanwhile the other brother, Tim (Khan
Chittenden), is discovering girls and, specifically, Jill (Emma Booth) whom he meets through
a job as a removal van man. What follows is a touching and honest look at awkward teenage
romance under the disapproving eye of mum.
For her part, mum continues to ply her stand-up comedy routine to diminishing returns,
while looking whistfully at her fading photographs showing her with Benny Hill and
Morecambe and Wise.
Director Cherie Nowlan and scriptwriter Keith Thompson have crafted a winning comedy tale
that puts the fun in dysfunction and pulls gently at the heart strings – and best of all - the
characters are real people. The film deserves to be a big hit.