Add a Review

  • Forty something single mum discovers she is pregnant to the mortification of her teenage daughter. That's the plot. Sounds basic and it is but it's still a charming watch. Bronagh Gallagher is fantastic and just owns the screen whenever she appears on it with her lovely warm presence. Lola Pettigrew as the daughter plays it just right and even the usually annoying Paddy Courtney provides nice support. Not the most cinematic of movies and probably belongs on TV but a likeable cast lives a slight plot and you'll leave the cinema Happy but guaranteed you won't remember this movie in a years time.
  • The confusion of adolescence, the haze of being and the miracle of life.

    You could argue it's all been said before and in the next breath say it can never be said too often. There are no surprises here - but there is the resilience to, not only survive but to, find the golden nuggets so often deeply hidden.

    A bump along the way requires curiosity, and possibly empathy, from the viewer - but since when was that a bad thing?
  • When flighty fortysomething Pamela (Bronagh Gallagher) falls pregnant after a drunken one-nighter, her already fractious relationship with teenage daughter Allegra (Lola Petticrew) comes under further strain. Might this finally be the wake-up call she needs? Will the frost between mother and daughter begin to thaw? The answers aren't hard to guess in a predictable comedydrama that's a little short on big laughs. Yet it's convincingly played by its two terrific leads, while the barbed arguments carry enough sting that its soft-centred conclusion, contrived as it is, feels well earned.
  • It's a lovely movie, very good actors and enjoyable to watch.
  • ks-605007 March 2020
    The storyline is million of times that I have seen in my life. But it's just lovely and adorable to watch this. It's a good example of execution the way how the story was told.
  • I really liked this film. The theme and protagonists were real. But the execution wasn't as good. Too feminist to hit the bullseye.

    Some Women in society can have it tough, but not all Males are bad. That was the flaw in this missing the balance in this movie.

    Coming of age drama and a good story of bonding between a single parent and their child. Funny in parts too.
  • Okay, the message is this. Men are selfish scum. The best characters in this film is actually in a supporting role. The friend of the mother and the bakery co-worker. Anyway, the teenager, while pretty, just runs too hot and cold for credibility. She's sweet as honey to her Mom at one point then vile, cruel and vindictive the next. Teenagers are like that, but you'll take my meaning if you sit through this. It's this kind of tripe that sabotages this film throughout. The school bully is a bit over the top. The teacher is a joke, too. But still it's enjoyable in parts, minus the predictable sappy ending. The main character, the mom, is played quite well and she had my sympathy for having raised such a snot of a girl. I dunno man. It just kind of left me cold. Was expecting so much more from this. Try The Snapper. It's a much more clever and competently produces movie, although in that one it's the daughter that's preggers.
  • Just chanced upon this on SBS World Movies (Australia). Really glad I did, it was instantly enjoyable. A story we've more or less all seen before, but the Irish just seem to have a knack of doing these things really well. Great performances by the two lead actors.
  • This is a terrific film which cracks (craics!) along at a terrific pace with plenty of laugh out loud moments. I saw it at the UK premiere at the Regents Street Cinema and the place rocked with laughter. Super central performance from Bronagh Gallagher with fine support all round. Pretty nifty soundtrack too.