Though Satisfaction isn’t at all times a simple movie to look at, it stays steeped in uncomfortable magnificence even at its darkest moments.
In writer-director Alex Burunova‘s characteristic debut, Emma Laird and Fionn Whitehead star as couple Lola and Philip, two British composers struggling to get by a block in each their artistic and romantic lives whereas vacationing on the Greek Isles. In the meantime, recollections of the start of their relationship and the introduction of gorgeous vacationer Elena (Zar Amir Ebrahimi) snaps Lola out of her haze.
Laird provides a surprising efficiency as Lola, a once-thriving musician who can’t make music anymore, blocked by an unstated trauma. The actress alternates seamlessly between two timelines; one as a younger queer artist excessive on life and obsessive about the thought of “synthesizing love” so she will be able to take it on daily basis, one other as an emotionally exhausted girl struggling to attach along with her associate, and extra importantly, with herself.
Burunova’s cinematic opera makes use of the intimacy of sound (and lack thereof) to depict the strain of affection, need and trauma between this trio.
Rising pissed off in her artistic block, Lola screams from the rooftop in a single scene, utterly silenced by the waves. When she confides her deepest, darkest fact in the course of the movie’s third act, Lola’s expression of ache is one once more drowned out by the sounds of the ocean. As she struggles to search out her voice as a musician, so does she as a lady grappling with an unstated actuality, presenting a profound comparability to the tragedy of Medusa of their Greek locale.
The significance of sound and reclaiming one’s voice in a poisonous relationship takes extra of a literal form when the vacationing pair overhears a neighboring couple violently combating within the villa beneath them. As a bystander tells them, the cops gained’t intervene except she screams for assist.
“Why gained’t she scream for assist?” asks Philip. Later, after realizing her personal traumatic fact, Lola throws a rock on the strangers’ window throughout one other battle, as if to represent their very own inner conflicts urging to interrupt free.
Set towards the beautiful historic great thing about the Greek Isles, Satisfaction affords a uniquely feminine and sapphic tackle the identical queer uncooked emotion and historic European magnificence that gained over Name Me by Your Title audiences.
With brilliantly understated supporting performances from Whitehead and Ebrahimi on this emotionally fraught onscreen love triangle, Laird shines as Lola, a lady struggling to attach. Burunova’s superbly composed portrait of grief, trauma and love captures that human battle with the suitable steadiness of poise and rage.
Title: Satisfaction
Pageant: SXSW (Narrative Highlight)
Gross sales Agent: UTA
Premiere date: March 7, 2025
Director-screenwriter: Alex Burunova
Forged: Emma Laird, Fionn Whitehead, Zar Amir, Adwoa Aboah
Working time: 1 hr 36 min