Skeletons (2010)
41KSkeletons: Directed by Nick Whitfield. With Ed Gaughan, Andrew Buckley, Tuppence Middleton, Paprika Steen. Two exorcists literally remove the skeletons from the cupboards from people’s homes. Some fairly embarrassing secrets are revealed along the way. A case where the skeletons have hidden themselves turns the lives of all those involved.
“Things start out oddly in this film – and it is a way that they pretty much continues for the rest of the film. We join two odd British characters who take the service they provide to clients around the UK with all the enthusiasm and customer-care that you would expect from travelling service people quite tired of their lot. The service they provide, we gradually learn, is to extract secrets from the psychic channels in the house for people who want all their skeletons out of their closet. It is an odd skill and one which the bitter Simon abuses as he spends his free time accessing the warm, safe memories he has rather than living in the moment. When their boss gives them an unusual job, they come up against challenges, but solving them could prove to be worse.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eAlthough it takes a minute to get a grip on what is happening, I did like the way that the film doesnu0026#39;t do a lot of exposition for the viewer but rather lets us work it out by watching. Likewise I liked that the detail of the howu0026#39;s and whatu0026#39;s was just left there along with the technical dialogue – because in a way these things donu0026#39;t really matter once you have the idea. And it is a good idea and it does translate into a nice film that is interesting throughout. Sadly thatu0026#39;s where my descriptive words tail off because I wasnu0026#39;t left with much more than that. I did u0026quot;likeu0026quot; the film but yet not as much as I had hoped and it never went beyond being u0026quot;interestedu0026quot; in it – it didnu0026#39;t ever move me or excite me.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eI know for some that the oddity of it all will be part of the reasons they love it but for me that was not enough and I found myself waiting for the film to deliver on these interesting concepts and odd atmosphere. It kinda does but again only in a way that is oddly interesting, not brilliant or really engaging. As a drama I wanted it to have more to move me or hold my attention. As a comedy it is gently comic but never more than this. Like I said, it is an odd film whose downfall is that it is odd to the point that this oddity is the only quality where one feels it is delivering on to its fullest potential. It is hard to describe and Iu0026#39;m sure those that love the film will rage at me but Iu0026#39;ve not really been able to find any comments by people who love this film that do not include a lot about how u0026quot;wonderfully oddu0026quot; it is or similar comments about how refreshing it is and how much better than Hollywood etc etc. Different can be good but different is mostly just different.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe performances are great though. Adamsdale and Buckley are both good together and also produce odd characters without losing sight of them being real people at heart – they are not played for laughs because of who they are, although the laughs may come. They are matched in their weirdness by Isaacs, Middleton, Steen and a few others, all of whom do good work and seem to judge their performances well for the material and tone of the film, I just wished the material had been a little stronger in terms of what the film was trying to do with the ideas (beyond being odd).u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eSo Skeletons turns out to be an interesting little curio that has good ideas and a very odd and comic tone. It doesnu0026#39;t produce a lot of laughs, drama, thrills or emotion though and, as much as I liked the weird feel and the plot, I did keep wanting it to delivery something else to me – but it is something that (if you havenu0026#39;t already guessed) Iu0026#39;m struggling to put my finger on.”