Jonathan Romney 

Black Mountain Poets review – half-cocked comedy

Neither the jabs at literary types nor the ensemble jokes quite come off in this caper about two women trying to pass themselves off as poets
  
  

Dolly Wells, Tom Cullen and Alice Lowe in Black Mountain Poets.
Dolly Wells, Tom Cullen and Alice Lowe in Black Mountain Poets. Photograph: Publicity image

This oddball bucolic romp has Alice Lowe and Dolly Wells as two sisters, con artists on the run who pose as acclaimed poets and hide out at a literary retreat in Wales’s Black Mountains. Shot in five days and improvised from an outline by director Adams (Benny and Jolene), it’s a ramshackle, low-key affair. Lowe excelled in a rather blacker back-to-nature comedy, Ben Wheatley’s Sightseers, while Tom Cullen was great in Andrew Haigh’s Weekend – but none of the ensemble interplay quite gels here. Jokes about pretentious poetic types are half-cocked – even Lowe’s impassioned recital of a Tesco receipt seems more like a rough run-through for a gag – and the main comic premise, three women getting in a rivalrously undignified flutter over Cullen’s amiably confused hunk, is about as un-Bechdel as it gets.

Watch the Black Mountain Poets trailer.
 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*