Rachel Tunnard's shrewd, sweary debut is terrifically, impossibly British and almost ashamed of its smarts, with classical references and astute observation modestly paired with pratfalls and dick jokes
Rachel Tunnard's film is a cheesy rehash of numerous stunted-adolescent dramedies; For the most part, the film is similarly content to repeat the past, all the way through to its predictable liberating-feel-good wrap-up
Jodie Whittaker brings light and life to this unambitious British indie; Whittaker is real and likeable; But it feels like first time director Rachel Tunnard is trying too hard, piling on the offbeat characters in Wes Anderson-weird costumes
director Rachel Tunnard does a fine job of balancing the film's laughs and its tears without feeling as though it's forcing either; Witty and moving, this is a low-budget Brit triumph that marks its director as a talent to watch