This is
the second Hello Carter featured on
Countdown to Thirteen. The first was a
short about an out-of-work, unlucky-in-love guy who’s thrown into a surprising
situation with Jodie Whittaker, while the second, made two years later, is a feature
film about an out-of-work, unlucky-in-love guy who’s thrown into a surprising
situation with Jodie Whittaker – and surprise, surprise, the same guy made both
projects! And yet, for all the
similarities, Hello Carter the movie
definitely isn’t a feature-length expansion of Hello Carter the short; it ultimately is a different story.
The
titular Carter has been air-mattress-surfing with his brother since he lost the
job, and the goodwill’s started to run out.
Kicked to the curb, Carter job-hunts while toting his worldly
possessions in duffel bags. He wants a
job, but what he really wants is his
ex-girlfriend Kelly back. They broke up
eleven months ago, but he’s determined to reconnect and calls everyone he knows
trying to get her number. A chance meeting
with Kelly’s brother, a washed-up actor with anger-management issues, lands
Carter in a quid-pro-quo arrangement that sets off a series of misadventures.
The last
word I’ll say on the subject of the short is that I think it’s better on the
whole – while neither is great, the short feels tighter, better put
together. The movie, on the other hand,
has some major pacing problems that leave it dragging, even when crazy stuff is
happening. While the film includes some
familiar faces and good actors – Carter is played by Charlie Cox of Daredevil, and the movie also features
the delightful Judy Parfitt (Sister Monica Joan from Call the Midwife) – it also displays some powerfully-unimpressive
acting on the part of the actor who plays Kelly’s brother.
The biggest
knock against the film is probably its overall tone, which I can best sum up as
“stilted.” Part of it is the wonky
pacing, and part of it is the particular way it illustrates how
down-on-his-luck Carter is. With a surer
hand and snappier editing, this could probably be funny, but as is, it’s a
little too sad-trombone to be enjoyable.
And Carter himself, despite being sort of proactive (if nothing else,
he’s tenacious in his attempt to get Kelly’s number, which I find rather
creepy,) still comes across as very passive – the sense I get is that life just
happens to him, which doesn’t make him super-compelling to watch.
On a
better note, this is the best showing Whittaker has had in a while on Countdown
to Thirteen. She plays Jenny, who works
at a company Carter interviews for. They
have themselves an elevator meet-cute, and while I’m not really sure what Jenny
sees in him, she’s intrigued and I won’t begrudge her for it. She’s a little sad too, stuck in an
unexciting job with a full-of-himself boss who won’t leave her alone, but she’s
mostly keeping her head down and getting through it. When they run into each other again, as
Carter is in the thick of his misadventures, Jenny gets sucked into it and both
are off on a crazy night.
I like
Jenny. She seems quiet but solid. She’s smart enough to realize she should
avoid whatever insanity Carter’s got going on, but when she gets tangled up in
it anyway, she proves herself both tough and resourceful. And even in the thick of the craziness, I
like that she can take a small moment out to enjoy herself – there’s an amusing
scene of her trying to figure out where she’s seen Kelly’s brother before. Not to mention, Carter is probably at his
best when, during their interactions, he gets out of his own head for a bit and
connects with Jenny.
Accent Watch
Northern
Recommend?
In
General
– Probably not. It’s okay, but not
really enough to be worth it.
Jodie
Whittaker
– I think I would. Whittaker does a nice
job with this performance, understated but effective.
Warnings
Sexual content,
language, violence, drinking, and thematic elements.
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