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''Only You'' is a 2018 British romantic
drama film In film and television, drama is a category or genre of narrative fiction (or semi-fiction) intended to be more serious than humorous in tone. Drama of this kind is usually qualified with additional terms that specify its particular super-g ...
written and directed by
Harry Wootliff Harry Wootliff is an English film and television director and screenwriter. Early life Wootliff trained at Elmhurst ballet school and Bristol Old Vic Theatre School. Career Wootliff's debut short film ''Nits'' screened in Cannes Directors' For ...
, and starring
Laia Costa Laia Costa Bertrán () (born February 18, 1985) is a Spanish actress who has worked in Spain, Russia, Germany, Argentina, Italy, United Kingdom and the United States. Life and career Costa was born in Barcelona, Spain. Costa obtained a degree ...
and
Josh O'Connor Josh O'Connor (born in 1989/1990) is a British actor. He portrayed a young Charles III (Prince Charles) in the Netflix drama ''The Crown'' (2019–2020), for which he won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Television Series Drama and th ...
as two strangers who meet on
New Year's Eve In the Gregorian calendar, New Year's Eve, also known as Old Year's Day or Saint Sylvester's Day in many countries, is the evening or the entire day of the last day of the year, on 31 December. The last day of the year is commonly referred to ...
, fighting over a taxi. Instead of going separate ways, they initiate a determined romance. The film premiered at The London Film Festival, nominated both for the First Feature Award and IWC Schaffhausen Filmmaker Bursary Award. ''Only You'' won The Critics’ Award at the 30th Dinard Film Festival, two British Independent Film Awards, a Writers' Guild Award, and was BAFTA nominated. It received critical acclaim.


Plot

Elena, 35, is a cynic about relationships. Jake, 26, is a romantic. They meet randomly and have what they both presume to be a one-night-stand. They meet again, and consumed by infatuation, they spend day and night together, missing work, and talking into the early hours. Jake seamlessly moves in with Elena and she reveals a secret: for fear of rejection she lied about her age. She's not 29, she's 32. Jake doesn't care and says she's gorgeous. A little later she's 33 'or 34 or 35?' Jake puts the light on and points out she has aged six years in four hours. She says he'll be 30 when she is 40, and he might want to break up with her, but he says he doesn't care. Elena insists the age difference is a problem - her parents' divorce has given her a fundamental mistrust of relationships. She pushes Jake away professing that she is ready to have children and he is too young – their relationship will not last. Jake's mum died when he was seven and he was brought up by his father who was devoted to his wife, and has not had another relationship since her death. Jake has inherited a surety about love and commitment which Elena cannot resist. Jake tells Elena he wants nothing more than to make a family with her and he doesn't want to waste any time. They start to make love. Six months later Elena isn't pregnant. A casual trip to the GP to check things are okay leads to tests at the hospital and a tense appointment during which Elena also reveals she had an abortion as a teenager, they are told that there is nothing wrong with either of them, but because they have been trying for over six months and Elena is over 35 years of age, they should put themselves on the list for an IVF date in another six months’ time. Elena has a horrible sense of foreboding. They have already embarked on a journey from which there is no turning back. Jake is optimistic. He is convinced that they will manage to conceive before the months are up. Elena is uplifted by Jake's optimism and buys into the idea that they will manage to have a baby naturally. The months go by. Sex becomes strategically timed. It leads to nothing but disappointment and IVF starts to feel inevitable. Elena and Jake try to face it with optimism. They put it to the back of their minds that the odds of IVF resulting in a pregnancy are low. They embrace the injections and appointments and interventions. It is an opportunity to have a baby. It will be worth it. But it fails. They both begin to privately doubt the possibility of ever having a family. They take out their disappointment on each other. Elena has a growing paranoia that Jake will leave her if she doesn't give him a child. A second round of IVF fails. An explosive argument leads to Elena telling Jake to leave. Jake tells Elena if he goes he will never come back. After time apart, Elena attends her best friends wedding and when she returns home that evening she gathers Jake's remaining belongings and texts him suggesting they meet so she can deliver them to him. They meet in a cafe and Elena breaks down. She is still profoundly in love with him and she tells him he was right when he said that they already were a family and that what they had together was too special to lose. Jake walks out abruptly leaving Elena in tears. He goes to stay with his dad and talks to him about Elena. He tells his dad that he doesn't know what to do, he and Elena had a perfect relationship just like his dad and mum did and he doesn't know how to get that back. His dad explains to Jake that perfection is just an illusion. He asks Jake if he still loves Elena and Jake nods. He then asks him what he will do if they never have children together; Jake covers his face with his hands. In the penultimate scene Jake sits alone, thoughtful. In the final scene, we see Elena walking through the park on an autumnal afternoon. She eventually comes to Jake who stands waiting for her. They walk towards and embrace each other tenderly.


Cast

*
Laia Costa Laia Costa Bertrán () (born February 18, 1985) is a Spanish actress who has worked in Spain, Russia, Germany, Argentina, Italy, United Kingdom and the United States. Life and career Costa was born in Barcelona, Spain. Costa obtained a degree ...
as Elena Aldana *
Josh O'Connor Josh O'Connor (born in 1989/1990) is a British actor. He portrayed a young Charles III (Prince Charles) in the Netflix drama ''The Crown'' (2019–2020), for which he won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Television Series Drama and th ...
as Jake * Peter Wight as Andrew *
Lisa McGrillis Lisa McGrillis (born 3 September 1982, Cheltenham, England) is a British actress. Early life and education McGrillis grew up in Scotby, near Carlisle in Cumbria with her mother, a special needs teacher, and her father, an accountant. She studie ...
as Carly *
Stuart Martin Stuart Martin (born 8 January 1986) is a Scottish actor. He is known for his roles in the Channel 4 comedy-drama ''Babylon'' (2014), as well as the historical dramas '' Medici: Masters of Florence'' (2016), '' Jamestown'' (2017–2019), and ''M ...
as Shane * Isabelle Barth as Rose * Orion Lee as Eddie


Production


Development

Harry Wootliff was primarily interested in telling a modern love story, that explores how life and people's expectations of love are in conflict.Yasmin, Omar (19 February 2019) ''Harpers Bazaar'
Is infertility the last taboo in cinema?
/ref> Yasmin Omar interviewed Wootliff alongside writer-director Tamara Jenkins, discussing whether infertility is the last taboo in cinema, Wootliff is quoted as saying “You’re grieving the loss of a future and you’re grieving the loss of nothing. People are still keeping it very secret... I think it’s more acceptable to talk about miscarriage than not being able to bear a child.” Wootliff was interested in subverting stereotypes, “I loved that he’s the one who’s open and she’s less into wearing her heart on her sleeve... I wasn’t pedaling this notion of a deranged woman pushed by her hormones to meet a man and have a baby.” Wootliff is interested in the subtlety of female experience, as opposed to two-dimensional representations, “I sometimes think it’s all about showing women to be very strong. I like my character because she’s a lot of things: she’s vulnerable, irrational, funny. That’s a woman. We have qualities that are deemed as less admirable – perhaps because we are in a male-dominated society – so why shouldn’t we see them?”


Filming

Shot in Finnieston, Glasgow, over 25 days.


Music

The film's original score was composed by Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch of
FatCat Records FatCat Records is an English independent record label based in Brighton. The label's output reaches into many styles including experimental rock, electronica, psychedelic folk, contemporary classical, noise and post-punk. Notable artists that ...
. Other music used in the film included songs by, among others,
Elvis Costello Declan Patrick MacManus Order of the British Empire, OBE (born 25 August 1954), known professionally as Elvis Costello, is an English singer-songwriter and record producer. He has won multiple awards in his career, including a Grammy Award in ...
,
Bronski Beat Bronski Beat were a British synthpop trio which achieved success in the mid-1980s, particularly with the 1984 chart hit "Smalltown Boy", from their debut album '' The Age of Consent''. "Smalltown Boy" was their only US ''Billboard'' Hot 100 s ...
and
Lhasa de Sela Lhasa de Sela (September 27, 1972 – January 1, 2010), also known by the mononym Lhasa, was an American-Canadian singer-songwriter who was raised in Mexico and the United States and divided her adult life between Canada and France. Her first al ...
. Several critics cited the use of Costello's " I Want You" twice in the film. Mark Kermode made note of the soundtrack more broadly: "Musically, the piano and cello themes of Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch's sparse score are counterposed against an eclectic jukebox selection of tracks, most notably the anguished vocals of Elvis Costello's I Want You – one of the most emotionally astute deployments of a pop song in a movie since Barry Jenkins's killer use of Barbara Lewis's Hello Stranger in Moonlight."


Reception

''Only You'' has been critically acclaimed. On
Rotten Tomatoes Rotten Tomatoes is an American review-aggregation website for film and television. The company was launched in August 1998 by three undergraduate students at the University of California, Berkeley: Senh Duong, Patrick Y. Lee, and Stephen Wang ...
the film has approval rating on review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes Rotten Tomatoes is an American review-aggregation website for film and television. The company was launched in August 1998 by three undergraduate students at the University of California, Berkeley: Senh Duong, Patrick Y. Lee, and Stephen Wang ...
, based on reviews. The site's critical consensus reads, "Beautifully filmed and powerfully acted, ''Only You'' traces the arc of a relationship with refreshing honesty -- and marks Harry Wootliff as a writer-director to watch." Ian Freer of ''Empire'' magazine noted the film's heartfelt, indie-romance aspirations, describing ''Only You'' as "that rare effort that could go toe-to-toe with its American counterpart, a passionate, moving love story told with nuance and heart". Similarly Peter Bradshaw described it as "a poignant and compelling Venn diagram of passion and heartache". Phil de Semlyen in ''Time Out'' called ''Only You'' a "compassionate, complex relationship drama will get you right in the feels", while in ''Sight & Sound'' Pamela Hutchinson reflected Wootliff's storytelling ability, 'a beautifully written screenplay, with a subtly symmetrical structure signposted by two spins of the mournful, urgent I Want You by Elvis Costello, but primarily driven by two recognisably familiar, fully realised characters' In ''The Observer'',
Mark Kermode Mark James Patrick Kermode (, ; ; born 2 July 1963) is an English film critic, musician, radio presenter, television presenter and podcaster. He is the chief film critic for ''The Observer'', contributes to the magazine ''Sight & Sound'', prese ...
felt Only You was 'a perfectly realised story of love and longing' and 'a terrifically engrossing drama about two wholly believable characters, made with the kind of wit, honesty and raw emotional intimacy that pierces right to the heart of their relationship'. In the ''Evening Standard'', Charlotte O'Sullivan was quick to point out the original take on the subject matter, 'O’Connor has argued that Only You is "as important as I, Daniel Blake". He's right. Via Elena and Jake, Wootliff champions the marginal and so-called imperfect.'O'Sulivan, Charlotte (12 July 2019) ''Evening Standard'
"An earthy romance that champions imperfection"
/ref>


References


External links

* {{IMDb title, 7531138
Only You
on
Rotten Tomatoes Rotten Tomatoes is an American review-aggregation website for film and television. The company was launched in August 1998 by three undergraduate students at the University of California, Berkeley: Senh Duong, Patrick Y. Lee, and Stephen Wang ...
2018 films 2018 independent films 2018 romantic drama films English-language Swedish films British independent films British romantic drama films Swedish independent films Swedish romantic drama films British pregnancy films 2010s English-language films 2010s British films 2010s Swedish films