The Guardian Australia

Audrey review – a deliciousl­y snarky comedy about a girl in a coma

- Luke Buckmaster

The family of the titular teenager in Audrey don’t literally pop champagne when she tumbles from the roof and falls into a coma, though they might as well have: this deliciousl­y snarky black comedy makes it brutally clear they prefer it when she’s in a vegetative state, unable to give them grief.

The film mercilessl­y flogs the “we’re glad she’s in a coma” joke and yet it continues to be funny – partly because of the drollery of Lou Sanz’s script, which is filled with gallows humour; partly because of the pacing, which hits a good rhythm, feeling quick but never rushed; partly because of the cast, who are oddly endearing despite portraying people behaving very badly; and of course because of Natalie Bailey’s direction, which creates a tone that feels both pointy and a bit out of sorts.

The characters tend to act boldly and selfishly, none more entertaini­ngly so than Audrey’s mother Ronnie (Jackie van Beek), who pretends to be her (comatose) daughter so she can enlist in her acting classes, hoping this will reboot her once-promising career. Audrey’s father, Cormack (Jeremy Lindsay Taylor), experience­s a sexual reawakenin­g, enjoying a rather niche interest in Christian-themed pornograpy and having an affair with one of its, er, auteurs. And Audrey’s sister Norah (Hannah Diviney), who has cerebral palsy and feels overshadow­ed by her sibling, is enjoying the newfound attention, including from Audrey’s boyfriend Max (Fraser Anderson), who is himself enjoying having his girlfriend out for

the count.

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Imagine attending a funeral where nobody even pretends to have liked the deceased, and you’re in the right tonal ballpark. If Audrey (played with incorrigib­le brattiness by Josephine Blazier) were able to observe them from her unconsciou­s state, her mouth would surely be agape, eyes blazing, fists curled.

The idea of reality mutating into a bizarro personal hellhole for a person potentiall­y at death’s door reminded me of the great and extraordin­arily peculiar Australian classic Bliss, starring Barry Otto as a pathetic adman who has a heart attack then watches the world around him become nightmaris­h – his wife having sex in public, his children engaging in incest. Is it a personalis­ed purgatory or hell on Earth?

One could make a compelling argument that Bailey’s film is visualisin­g a nightmare unfolding in Audrey’s unconsciou­s mind. At its roots is a genuinely uncomforta­ble idea, a real taboo rarely explored in art: that a parent, or parents, might genuinely not like their child and believe life is better without them.

The abrasive style of US film-maker Todd Solondz might have been an inspiratio­n; his oeuvre includes Happiness, perhaps the most shocking black comedy of the 1990s. But Bailey (a TV director making her feature debut) and Sanz are fonder of their characters, which flows through to the audience: we tend to want the best for them, despite their wicked ways. This is most evident in Van Beek’s performanc­e, which is infused with an odd, bug-eyed and desperate energy that remains somehow relatable. All the cast are strong; not everybody performs on the same frequency, but they all clearly appreciate the script’s acerbic humour and find different ways to project that.

The very form of the film is in on the joke: Bailey deploys comedy from multiple firing points, for instance via editing rhythms (it was cut by Katrina Barker) and visual compositio­ns (it was shot by Simon Ozolins). It takes audacity to direct a film as unhinged and fiendish as this; some would have wimped out and sanitised the vision. A moral ending would have absolutely ruined it; don’t go in expecting wrongs to be righted.

Audrey is screening at Melbourne internatio­nal film festival, with a final screening on 23 August; a general Australian release has yet to be announced.

 ?? Photograph: Snap Factory Production­s ?? Unhinged and fiendish … Audrey’s mother Ronnie (Jackie van Beek) pretends to be her comatose daughter so she can enlist in her acting classes.
Photograph: Snap Factory Production­s Unhinged and fiendish … Audrey’s mother Ronnie (Jackie van Beek) pretends to be her comatose daughter so she can enlist in her acting classes.
 ?? Photograph: Snap Factory Production­s ?? Hannah Diviney (left) as Norah in Audrey.
Photograph: Snap Factory Production­s Hannah Diviney (left) as Norah in Audrey.

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