25 June 2025
On Tuesday I was at the Curzon cinema at Milton Keynes Gallery to see 'The Ballad of Wallis Island' - a beautiful melancholy comedy written by and starring Tom Basden and Tim Key, directed by James Griffiths. Tom Basden and Carey Mulligan play an estranged folk duo, persuaded to reunite for a one-off performance on a remote Welsh island by a wealthy benefactor. Tim Key's Charles uncomfortably fills every silence with inane running commentary and puns - but it is clear that every one of his awkward words has been carefully crafted by the poet Tim Key. This feels a more mature, thoughtful drama than I have seen before from either Basden or Key, though it is still very funny and has a couple of great slapstick moments. These characters get past their initial cartoonish mannerisms (irritatingly nerdy and self-importantly broody) to become properly sympathetic. The original songs (written by Tom Basden) are serious and beautiful - and excellently sung by Basden and Carey Mulligan. When the end titles started, everyone in the cinema sat in silence listening to the final song right to the end of the credits before anyone moved. And Sian Clifford almost steals the show as the cheerful, helpful but hopeless shopkeeper. It's a gentle, lovely, moving film.
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