Funny Pages (18)
Fri 30 Sep 2022 - Thu 06 Oct 2022
Category
Other Information
18
Price
£8* Standard | £5* Student / Under 25s
Time
Various (See dates below)
Fri 30 Sep 2022 - Thu 06 Oct 2022
Other Information
18
Price
£8* Standard | £5* Student / Under 25s
Time
Various (See dates below)
Dir. Owen Kline
2022 | 87 mins
Daniel Zolghadri, Matthew Maher, Miles Emanuel
Produced by the Safdie brothers, Owen Kline’s directorial debut is a coming-of-age tale about a wannabe cartoonist reaching a crucial point in his life. A scuzzy dark comedy that makes you gag and laugh at the same time.
Robert (Daniel Zolghadri, Eighth Grade) believes that to be an artist is to suffer. So, he gives up on his affluent Princeton upbringing and drops out of high school in favour of life in a stuffy New Jersey apartment to really commit himself to his art. His best friend Miles is a fellow comic enthusiast, and both spend much of their time at the local comic store, obsessing over the work of artists more engaged with everyday life than the antics of superheroes. Their idols are the Robert Crumbs, Daniel Clowes and Harvey Pekars of this world. Robert sustains this lifestyle by working part-time at the comic store, and part-time at the office of a public defender. It is there he first meets Wallace, who, Robert finds out, once worked as colour separator for the legendary Image Comics. Ignoring Wallace’s borderline-deranged personality, Robert becomes besotted, leading him down a chaotic path of misadventures.
Just like the comics Robert and Miles obsess over, Funny Pages captures everyday life through the prism of the absurd. A session with an art teacher turns bizarre and then tragic. There’s a landlord who appears to have an extreme aversion to sunlight. And Wallace’s comic pedigree notwithstanding, he wouldn’t be out of place in an incel therapy session. Writer-director Kline, who played the young lead in Noah Baumbach’s The Squid and the Whale (2005) gives his film a grungy aesthetic in keeping with the style of his producers Benny and Josh Safdie (Uncut Gems, Good Time), perfectly capturing Robert’s world and psyche.
★★★★★ – ‘Kline has given us, one of the most original films of 2022 in this quietly bonkers indie comedy’
THE JEWISH CHRONICLE
★★★★★
THE GUARDIAN
Take advantage of our lunch deal after the screening on Fri 30 Sep!
Your ticket includes the film, a freshly prepared lunch and anything from our soft drink selections.