SILENT WITNESS
POWERFUL BIOPIC CHARTS THE TRUE STORY OF WELSH SISTERS WHO FORGE A DESTRUCTIVE PACT
THE SILENT TWINS (18) HHHII
THE Silent Twins is a stylistically ambitious dramatisation of the true story of June and Jennifer Gibbons, who forged a pact from an early age to speak exclusively to each other.
Growing up in 1960s Wales where they were the only black pupils at school, the siblings wrote copiously in private, immersed in an imaginary world of handmade puppets, which stop-motion animator Barbara Rupik realises on screen in vibrant and naively disturbing vignettes.
Polish director Agnieszka Smoczynska utilises June and Jennifer’s written words to chart a haphazard course through the girls’ traumatic childhoods, punctuated by psychological and physical abuse, and a turbulent adolescence culminating in charges of arson and petty theft.
June (Leah Mondesir-Simmonds) is born 10 minutes before Jennifer (Eva-Arianna Baxter) but the younger twin is the dominant personality at home in Haverfordwest, where their father Aubrey (Treva Etienne) – part of the Windrush generation – is stationed as an air traffic controller for the RAF.
The twins refuse to engage verbally with the rest of the clan including their mother Gloria (Nadine Marshall) and older siblings Greta (Amarah-Jae St Aubyn) and David (Hubert Sylla).
Only when they are alone in their bedroom do the girls communicate in a hushed, barely intelligible patois, conjuring fantastical stories and poems with handmade puppets and entertaining fanciful dreams of becoming world famous writers.
As they enter teenagehood, June (now played by Letitia Wright) and Jennifer (Tamara Lawrance) nurture a mutual obsession with hellraising local lad Wayne (Jack Bandeira). He kindles their sexual awakening and June sparks combustible sibling rivalry by pooling dole money to publish her book The PepsiCola Addict.
The siblings are eventually admitted to Broadmoor psychiatric hospital “without limit of time” where journalist Marjorie Wallace (Jodhi May) takes an interest in their case.
Andrea Seigel’s script confidently juggles incendiary subject matter – burgeoning female sexuality, mental illness, racial discrimination – but struggles to weave a strong emotional thread through upsetting scenes of June and Jennifer’s self-destruction despite scintillating performances.
The Silent Twins is a surrealistic biopic that lives, breathes (and sometimes chokes) on the director’s audacious flourishes including a splashy Busby Berkeley-style fantasia with synchronised swimmers and introspective scenes narrated in song by Lawrance.
Even when the storytelling falters, the craftswomanship is exemplary, mirroring the brutal tug of war between imagination and harsh reality that alienated the Gibbons from their surroundings, until the sisterly bond was severed by the one force beyond June and Jennifer’s control: death.
In cinemas Friday