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Nobody Loves You and You Don't Deserve to Exist

  • 2022
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
102
YOUR RATING
Nobody Loves You and You Don't Deserve to Exist (2022)
As contagion befalls Great Britain, and millions reflect upon their lives, a grieving English teacher attempts to recover fragments of his shattered self within the cathedrals, canals and crevices of Greater Manchester.
Play trailer1:41
1 Video
63 Photos
DramaMystery

This multi award-winning British feature film follows a grieving ex-English teacher as he takes us on a personal journey through Broken Britain under Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s, John Maj... Read allThis multi award-winning British feature film follows a grieving ex-English teacher as he takes us on a personal journey through Broken Britain under Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s, John Major in the 1990s and Boris Johnson in the 2020s.This multi award-winning British feature film follows a grieving ex-English teacher as he takes us on a personal journey through Broken Britain under Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s, John Major in the 1990s and Boris Johnson in the 2020s.

  • Director
    • Brett Gregory
  • Writer
    • Brett Gregory
  • Stars
    • Lucy Avison
    • Emma Bradburn
    • Caroline Chesworth
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    102
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Brett Gregory
    • Writer
      • Brett Gregory
    • Stars
      • Lucy Avison
      • Emma Bradburn
      • Caroline Chesworth
    • 36User reviews
    • 52Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:41
    Official Trailer

    Photos63

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    Top cast16

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    Lucy Avison
    • Newsreader #1
    Emma Bradburn
    • Suzy…
    Caroline Chesworth
    Caroline Chesworth
    • The Narrator
    Reuben Clarke
    Reuben Clarke
    • Young Jack
    Nicki Davy
    • Tina
    Julie Hannan
    Julie Hannan
    • Barbara
    David Howell
    • Old Jack
    Sophie Lund
    • Newsreader #3
    Lisa Maguire
    • Carol
    Alexandra Maxwell
    • Newsreader #2
    Mushi Noor
    Mushi Noor
    • Newsreader
    Jenny Owen
    • Ruth
    Rachel Padden
    Rachel Padden
    • Sacha
    Wendy Patterson
    Wendy Patterson
    • Helen
    Margot Richardson
    • Margaret
    James Ward
    • Jack
    • Director
      • Brett Gregory
    • Writer
      • Brett Gregory
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews36

    7.4102
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    Featured reviews

    robintwatson

    Visionary, but flawed and difficult to comprehend.

    I love off the wall films and this was certainly visionary - as reviewed by others - but it left me feeling bored and watching the clock.

    Monologue works better in Alan Bennett's Talking Heads, where the scripts are more tightly written, and the story arcs more accessible.

    The dialogue feels very written rather than spoken and therefore quite unnatural, unlike in Shane Meadows' nominally comparable films where adlibbing creates a feeling of authenticity.

    Plot is almost entirely absent and, while I can appreciate that plot is often prioritised over character in mainstream film making, I personally need more of what I would call plot (and call back) to maintain my interest.

    The casting was good but the middle actor is very 'theatrical' in his delivery, and I couldn't suspend my disbelief. The older jack's drunken scene towards the end was a fantastic peice of acting.

    Overall, I would say that, while very worthy, and absolutely correct in its themes of modern British degradation, it was a film that I would not watch again, and not recommend except to a technical audience, who would no doubt find much of interest in its unusual execution, for better and worse.

    I know I'm vastly outnumbered in my relatively negative opinion, but I still deserve to exist.
    10haysusmog

    Dark Mancunian poetry

    This is a mysterious, monologue-fuelled masterpiece filmed on a shoestring in the heart of gritty Manchester and beyond. Great writing, visuals, direction and performances, all round.
    7DOMANUTD197

    Imagine 'Naked', but if David Lynch directed it.

    Rare, to find a film like this that is so nauseatingly intrusive on how we currently behave and live, under a fallen empire, sank by avarice and false nationalism.

    It's clear to see this was done on a small budget, which admittedly took me time to adjust to and actively engage with the genius monologue driven writing that is on show, reminiscent of the agonising theatre of cruelty or Dreyer's 'Ordet'

    I would of liked to have experienced more of the child actor, witnessed more of the narrative from his perspective I think would of shinned a more empathetic light on this piece. However, the monologue delivered by this child star is something I can't recall having been achieved at this level.

    I may do an extended review in the future, but I can only recommend this unique indie film to all aspiring and currently struggling academics and filmmakers.

    • DO.
    10darkviper-11545

    An underground gem about to take the North West

    Manchester to a T. After attending the private screening on the 15th I was mind blown by what I saw.

    The child actor Reuben was phenomenal in the role of 'Young Jack' and stood out as a performance that I haven't seen before from a child actor.

    I cannot wait for this to be released.
    8ArmsofGregory666

    A fantastical triptych that brings us closer to Bosch's twisted imagery.

    When you look closely at Hieronymus Bosch's works, you'll see a slew of tiny, tucked-away micro-portraits. Religious allusions, eroticized violence, and references to heaven and hell are only some of the elements that made Bosch's art such a bizarre tapestry of sin and transcendence.

    Why, you might wonder, am I referring to a 16th-century Dutch artist in the context of a film review? The explanation is simple: 'Nobody Loves You and You Don't Deserve to Exist' is a complicated code of enigmatic imagery that illuminates a link between conservative Britain and the late-medieval currents of heaven and hell.

    This bold assertion is reinforced from the outset by a horrific, yet elegantly delicate medieval composition that walks us as the spectator through each micro-portrait of Bosch's "The Garden of Earthly Delights." The storyline of this film is found in the geography of medieval music. Given the prevalence of travel, pilgrimage, exile, peregrinations, and the like throughout this time, "Jack," the working-class jester disturbed by the mind of a tortured saint, is no exception. In a similar vein to Barry Unsworth or Emilio de' Cavalieri's works, the reader is immersed in the life of an outsider, in this case a whole gallery of classic medieval archetypes and relative outsiders in their own right, as they are only revealed to the audience in theatre-like extensive monologues delivered to them directly in a genius blend of performance and interview, I found myself constantly asking who is the interviewer? But, that question is not something that requires a definitive answer.

    Information is pieced together through the murmurs of women, most of whom appear to have little moral culpability for Jack, except for the closing speech, which connects with the remorse we feel after the fact, when it's too late to alter anything. This is further kept together by a god-like narrator recounting to us Jack's wonders and woes, along with fantastic gothic imagery scattered with brutalist and increasingly modernist architecture, which appears to move away from purity as the tale proceeds.

    To expand on this final point, I take away from this film the harmful and immoral stupidity that has steadily engulfed the now-isolated former United Kingdom. Brett Gregory, the director/writer, also thoughtfully and efficiently adapts each chaotic pane of Bosch's painting into its own narrative act, a challenging feat to do but one that rarely failed to astound me.

    In short summary, excellent writing and a fresh plot, with some wonderful characters and a vivid direction, respectfully paying due to the world of art and literature alike.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • 2022 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Official Website
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Manchester, Greater Manchester, England, UK(M15)
    • Production company
      • Serious Feather
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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