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  • A twenty-something man is having a shave while his best friend hands around the house. The man is a bit of a clown and enjoys joking around and not taking anything too seriously. With some money in their pocket, the two go out to the cinema and then for a quick drink. They meet a couple of girls in the pub and both men hit it off reasonably well with them until, that is, the man's rather worse for wear father joins them.

    With the whole film being a very clear reference to films within the French new wave I thought that this was going to be much more directed around that, perhaps in the way that the similar UK short Je t'aime John Wayne had done to pretty humorous effect. However this aspect never got to be more than just a backdrop – the fact that it resembled such films never became the all, which I suppose is a good thing in a way. For the majority of the film it is an interesting character piece that looks at the young man in question and allows us to see the thing in his life that has made him perhaps hide behind the constant joking. To me this was of interest but sadly I didn't think it did that as well as it could as it felt constrained a bit by the new wave touches and the audience was required to do a lot of interpretation rather than the script being used to bring it out.

    Freeman is quite good but I couldn't help get the feeling that he has played this same character more than once, albeit slight variations along the way. He is effective although I wish he had been given more chance to bring out the side of his character that I got the impression he was burying at the same time. Peacock plays the character that fits in much better with the new wave feel but the downside is that he is less of a person – not that it really matters that much. Cooke's father is well played so that we don't dislike him to the point where that is our overriding emotion – we do dislike him but we are invited to care for the son more.

    Overall this is a good film but I couldn't shake the feeling that the two elements (character and genre) got in each others way a little bit and, although both worked well enough to make for an enjoyable short film, I felt that they could have done better with either of them – preferably the character element.
  • I am very surprised there are so few people who have commented on this or rated this.

    I saw this a few years ago on The Talent, on BBC2, and the two names I took away from this were Jamie Thraves and Martin Freeman, who are obviously talents.

    I have followed both of them since then.

    This is an excellent short film.

    The only other time I've seen a film by accident and it's stayed in my memory is The Telephone Box - Legendary Spanish film which I saw when I was in my school years.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Well.. that is a bit too harsh maybe as this film was not a complete failure, but it certainly was not a good watch either. "I Just Want to Kiss You" is an 11-minute black-and-white film from almost 20 years ago and it is really only somewhat known because of Emmy award winner Martin Freeman playing the lead character. It was one of his very first on-screen appearances. The writer and director is Jamie Thraves whose so far most famous work is "The Cry of the Owl" starring Julia Stiles and Paddy Considine. The story is fairly forgettable. This is mostly a romance comedy, but it was never emotional nor funny in my opinion. Sometimes, the action was way over the top. I cannot say if it was Freeman's mannerisms or the way the character was written, but at times it was fairly painful to watch. Certainly not among the brightest hours for everybody who worked on this one. Not recommended.
  • This is a great and exciting short. A day in the life of some ordinary blokes, one guy's attempts to find himself a snog; and get away from his old man. Already an award winning film this film makes me laugh every time I see it. Black and white, so what, after a minute I didn't want it to be any other way.