Aki Omoshaybi makes an impressive feature-directing debut in a heartfelt story about a working-class couple in Portsmouth
It is not unusual for
British directors to cut their teeth on slice of life drama, but few pull it off with as much warmth and care for the lives they’re putting on screen as Aki Omoshaybi, who makes an impressive feature debut with this low-key portrait of a black working-class couple in Portsmouth. It is a It’s a little rough around the edges, but Real is a deep-feeling romance, assembled on a budget of next to nothing outside the usual funding channels – Omoshaybi cast the actors by messaging them on
Instagram.
The director gives a quietly convincing turn himself as Kyle, a wary man with gentle eyes who’s not long out of
prison – everything he owns fits into a bin bag. When he meets Jamie (Pippa Bennett-Warner), Kyle invents another life for himself, giving her the impression that he’s a solicitor. Jamie also lies, telling him that she has an office
Job when actually she works part-time in a supermarket while studying accountancy and looking after her son. One night, in a restaurant neither can afford to visit, she blurts out a confession: “I just don’t want to be defined by what I do.” Kyle and Jamie see in each other the better future they hope for.