Chichester Observer

Laughs, sadness and a very sweary blast

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Wicked Little Letters (15), (100 mins), Cineworld Cinemas

With filming locations including arundel, worthing and Little hampton, there’ s plenty to look out for in wicked little letters, the tale of the poisonous, obscenity-laden scribbling­s which tormented Littlehamp­ton back in the 1920s.

But just as importantl­y there are fine performanc­es and a cracking good tale tosavour–an intriguing story in the great british quirky comedy tradition, but ultimately also a story which hints at tragic depths of repression and frustratio­n. There are plenty of laughs and an inordinate number of Fbombs, but maybe it’s the sadness of it all – plus a little hint of tenderness – which lingers most as the credits roll.

A huge part of the pleasure is also the evocation of seaside Britain a century ago. It all feels fabulously convincing in terms of the interiors, the streets and the clothes, but also remarkably persuasive when it comes to the attitudes, the lives and the shadow the Great War was still casting.

At the film’s heart are two hugely contrastin­g neighbours who somehow strike up a strange friendship. At least to start with. There’ s the deeply conservati­ve, brittly-piousolivi­a col man) on one side of the dividing wall; on the other is the let-it-all-hang-out row dy gob by irish migrant rose Gooding (Jessie Buckley).

Something brings them together – but then Edith starts to receive the foul est, most profane letters in the post, spewing bile and the most colourful sexual innuendo. There’s general agreement that Rose is the most likely suspect – except, as Rose tellingly points out, why on earth would she write what everyone knows she wouldn’t hesitate for a moment to say?

Beholden to her bullying, domineerin­g father (Timothy Spall), Colman is excellent in the role, absolutely outraged and yet somehow enjoying the outrage and the martyrdom which the letters quickly bring her.

Buckley is similarly the devil-may-care single mum. Edith has got nothing to lose and that could just be her tragedy; Rose has got a heck of a lotto lose–and that could well be hers.

Suspecting her innocence, though, is police officer gladys Moss (Anjana Vasan), ahead of her time in an era where women police officers really aren’t expected or indeed invited to do anything and, just as bizarrely, an era when – even in a poison letter scandal–the courts apparently aren’t remotely interested­in actually examining the handwritin­g. Gladys is warned off the case by her smugly uninquirin­g male superiors, but she drums up her allies – and it becomes a race against time as Rose’s trial beckons, a reckoning which could see her ripped away from her daughter for a very long time.

Just occasional­ly, as yet another letter is indignantl­y read aloud, you feel that the film possibly might actually need more to it than we are actually getting.

We soon get past the point where the letters are funny. and we soon get the point that they are appalling.

Plus, arguably, it’ s pretty obvious rather too soon just who exactly is behind them. But then again, that’s a key part of what’s probably going to make the film memorable – the sadness and the isolation which motivate the letter-writing rather than the sweary blast it results in.

 ?? ?? Wicked Little Letters (contribute­d pic)
Wicked Little Letters (contribute­d pic)

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