The Guardian (USA)

The Party’s Just Beginning review – Karen Gillan's dark days in the depths of grief

- Cath Clarke

The actor Karen Gillan makes her writer-director debut with a downbeat, interestin­g-but-flawed drama set in her hometown of Inverness, and shot on a tiny budget – the kind of money they probably spent on almond milk lattes making the Avengers blockbuste­rs in which she played cyborg Nebula.

Her character here is familiar from countless millennial indie movies: a funny, smart twentysome­thing who can’t pull her life together, boozing too much, sleeping with the wrong guys, waking up still wearing her mascara. But a gravitatio­nal downwards pull tugs at the film, though I wasn’t convinced it has the emotional depth for the dark places Gillan wants to take it.

As well as writing and directing, she plays underachie­ving 24-year-old Liusaidh (pronounced “Lucy”), who lives with her parents and works behind the cheese and ham counter at the local supermarke­t. The film begins with a

Trainspott­ing-ish drunken rant by Liusaidh about the shitness of Inverness; later she tells a guy that she drinks to make her job bearable. “You can’t really conjure up the energy to resent it through a hangover.”

But Gillan’s film isn’t really about disaffecti­on or despair. Liusaidh’s nihilism is driven by grief after the suicide of her best friend, Alistair (sensitivel­y played by Matthew Beard).

In flashbacks, we watch Liusaidh with thoughtful, introverte­d Alistair, a gay man in a hopeless relationsh­ip with an evangelica­l Christian. Back to the present, all unprocesse­d guilt and anger, she gets pissed and shags randoms in pub toilets. Towards the end there is a scene of sexual violence that Gillan doesn’t give enough space to explore, adding to the film’s undernouri­shed, unfinished feel.

Elsewhere, there’s some fun banter between Liusaidh and a friend (Rachel Jackson), and these scenes have a relaxed and unselfcons­cious truthfulne­ss to them. I can’t help thinking Gillan’s superpower as a writer and performer might actually be comedy. Still, always a compelling screen presence, she’s now a film-maker to watch.

• The Party’s Just Beginning is released in the UK on 1 December.

 ??  ?? Millennial anxiety … Karen Gillan and Matthew Beard in The Party’s Just Beginning
Millennial anxiety … Karen Gillan and Matthew Beard in The Party’s Just Beginning

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