Empire (UK)

Pin Cushion

- Plot Ian Freer

director Deborah Haywood cast Joanna Scanlan, Lily Newmark, Sacha Cordy-nice, Chanel Cresswell

Northern England. Eccentric, shy Lyn (Scanlan) and daughter Iona (Newmark) relocate to a new town. As Iona falls foul of school queen bee Keeley (Cordy-nice) and Lyn fails to make friends, the pair pretend everything is okay. But when Ione’s fortunes change, Lyn faces a life alone. Pin Cushion starts in Indie 101 territory. Mother and daughter, the mother in odd shoes, the daughter in a pink knitted bobble hat, are driving in a camper van carrying a bird cage. It could be the opening of any sundance audience Favourite, but happily writer-director Deborah Haywood’s feature debut charts a course from whimsy to something more interestin­g, challengin­g and ultimately dark. anchored by great performanc­es from Joanna scanlan and Lily Newmark, Pin Cushion emerges as both a funny, entertaini­ng, complex portrayal of female relationsh­ips (both familial and friendship­s), and a frightenin­g reminder of how bullying can seep from the playground into adulthood in insidious ways.

the mother and daughter moving to a new Northern town are Lyn (scanlan) and Iona (Newmark). Lyn is disabled and friendless, obsessed with her budgie, her ceramic knick-knacks and keeping her teen daughter in a perpetuall­y childish state (they share a bed). It’s a relationsh­ip that is tested when Iona meets nice boy Daz (Loris scarpa) and becomes inducted into her new school’s ‘Mean Girls’ clique, dominated by the vicious Keely (Cordy-nice). With Lyn becoming lonelier — she gets into a running argument with neighbour Belinda (Cresswell) over a borrowed ladder — the once tight unit is starting to fracture.

Hayward punctuates Iona and Lyn’s quietly painful existence — they are constantly lying to each other about the fullness of their lives — with sparkly flights of fantasy (Nadine Coyle cameos as Iona’s dream air hostess mum). Imaginativ­e and inventive as these are, Hayward’s grip occasional­ly falters, the surfeit of stylisatio­n blunting the film’s pricklier elements and selling short the characters’ inner depths and vulnerabil­ities. still, the eccentric aesthetic is impressive, from Nicola Daley’s dreamy cinematogr­aphy (extra woozy during Iona’s discovery of self-pleasure), to production designer Francesca Massariol’s hand-crafted interior design, to Natalie Holt’s eclectic, effective score. Kudos, too, to casting director Kharmel Cochrane for mounting such a great line-up of fresh young talent.

Joanna scanlan is one of those actors who is good in everything (see The Thick of it, The invisible Woman) and shines here in a rare lead role. she makes Lyn’s loneliness and pain tangible beneath the hand-knitted jumpers — the moment she is ousted from a women’s friendship group (by Peep show’s Isy suttie) just for being different is especially heartbreak­ing. Newmark is equally terrific, perfectly etching a girl discoverin­g the sugar rush of first kisses and lip gloss where there has previously been Chapsticks, and becoming a cool kid but deep down knowing she doesn’t really fit in. at one point, when Lyn cradles Iona, the image resembles a Derbyshire version of Brian De Palma’s Carrie, Newmark’s fragile pale features and shock of ginger hair adding to the sissy spacek vibe. together the pair ensure a potentiall­y quirky 82 minutes lands with real feeling.

Verdict Uneven in places, Pin Cushion nonetheles­s offers a moving meditation on what it feels like to be different, elevated by great work from Joanna Scanlan and newcomer Lily newmark.

 ??  ?? There had been a slight misunderst­anding over the request for “layered performanc­es”.
There had been a slight misunderst­anding over the request for “layered performanc­es”.

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