Stranding
eight characters in an isolated country house, this film
combines a murder mystery parody with a dry satire of politically
correct self-help culture. The result is an extremely odd
concoction--sinister and hilariously pointed.
Donna
(McGovern) is a Californian who runs Adventures In Truth
weeks in Serenity Lodge on a moor somewhere in Britain.
The wheelchair-bound Candy (Cassidy) doesn't want to be
there, and within minutes is fed up with the other students:
womanising Felix (Lord), pompous Martha (Stirling), creepy
Blossom (Telford), self-help addict Spud (Theobald) and
needy Scott (Beck). And then there's Donna's Bosnian assistant
(Mornar), who's taking the course but still has to cook
and clean. After some confessional therapy, one of them
turns up dead. Is it a crime or a cry for help?
The
laceratingly funny script is played dead straight. Virtually
every scene is loaded with jabs at self-indulgence, blind
faith and everyday falseness. Most astutely, the script
digs into those cathartic confessions we often feel help
us get on with life, when they're actually just lies we
tell ourselves. As these people band together and gang up
on anyone who disagrees, the film makes some razor-sharp
observations on human nature.
But
it's so bone dry that it's hard to engage with. The outrageous
exchanges ("I was a dot.com millionaire and they can't
take that away from me." "But, they did.")
are played with straight faces. This keeps us outside, but
lets the actors create authentic people out of absurdly
stock characters. And since it's not played for laughs,
it feels almost like a fly-on-the-wall doc. Think The Office
spiced up with murder and menace. Cassidy is especially
good in the central role; we follow the week through her
repulsed, fascinated, terrified eyes.
Director-cowriter
Milton shoots and edits with skill, although he struggles
to maintain the balance between the satire, the whodunit
and an increasingly Hitchcockian thriller. The cycles of
cruelty and humiliation are fairly gruesome, and the "share
your truth" mumbo jumbo becomes a bit grating as the
film drags on far too long. But it's gripping and hilariously
unhinged if you're in the right mood.
The Truth Cast:
Elizabeth McGovern, Elaine Cassidy, Stephen Lord,
Rachael Stirling,
Zoe Telford, Karl Theobald, William Beck, Lea Mornar,
Amelia Bullmore, Sean Murray, David Cann, Sheyla Shehovich