Animals

    Animals
    2019

    Synopsis

    Laura and Tyler are best friends and drinking buddies whose hedonistic existence falls under the creeping horror of adulthood when Laura gets engaged to Jim – an ambitious pianist who surprisingly decides to go teetotal.

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    Cast

    • Holliday GraingerLaura
    • Alia ShawkatTyler
    • Fra FeeJim
    • Dermot MurphyMarty
    • Amy MolloyJean
    • Pat ShorttBill
    • Olwen FouéréMaureen
    • Kwaku FortuneJulian
    • Elva TrillKirsten
    • Anthony MorrisChicken Sandwich

    Recommendations

    • 80

      The Guardian

      Its wild nature won’t be to everyone’s taste, but that’s sort of the point. It’s not a film that cares if you find these women charming or likable – it just cares that you believe them.
    • 80

      Empire

      Grainger is a revelation and Shawkat a rebel in this delightfully defiant celebration of women’s imperfections. Stick with them through the chaos and you’ll be rewarded with an utterly electric tale of female friendship.
    • 75

      IndieWire

      Grainger and Shawkat are wonderful together, conveying the depth of a 10-year relationship with affection and honesty.
    • 70

      Variety

      It’s the performances that punch through the illusion, as Grainger and Shawkat’s dynamic turns on a dime from raucous, debauched complicity to savage mutual confrontation — the kind of close, cold truth-telling that, where best friends are involved, results more often than not in hurtful lies being told.
    • 60

      Screen Daily

      Animals is a smoothly-made, beguiling tale of female friendship, which, like its protagonist Laura (Holliday Grainger), sometimes feels a little lost, in need of a home.
    • 60

      The Guardian

      Some of the wisecracking dialogue falls a bit flat and the narrative line is occasionally uncertain, but Grainger creates a watchable quarterlife crisis.
    • 50

      The Hollywood Reporter

      The book Animals is based on, a well-reviewed literary work originally set in Manchester, has been adapted by the novelist herself, Emma Jane Unsworth. So why does the end result feel so inert and contrived, even if it's exceedingly pretty to look at?