Wendy Ide 

In Camera review – smart, surreal showbiz satire hits a nerve

An aspiring actor faces endless knock-backs in writer-director Naqqash Khalid’s enjoyably exaggerated skewering of the TV and film industry
  
  

Nabhaan Rizwan as actor Aden, seen in profile in an audition lineup in the film In Camera
Nabhaan Rizwan as ‘hollowed out’ actor Aden in In Camera. Photograph: PR IMAGE

There’s only so much rejection an aspiring actor can take, only so many tone-deaf notes from distracted casting directors before it starts to take its toll. Aden (Nabhaan Rizwan) is a husk of a man, his own identity hollowed out, ready to be filled by a role – any role. Meanwhile, his Irish flatmate Bo (Rory Fleck Byrne), a junior doctor, is so wrung out by exhaustion that the boundary between reality and nightmare is blurring (this subplot is the least successful).

Then a new lodger moves in. Conrad (Amir El-Masry) has a smile full of teeth and glittering opportunities. He works in fashion but spends most of his energy marketing himself. And in him, Aden sees a way to combat the indifference of his industry.

This witty first feature from Manchester-born Naqqash Khalid (who segued into film-making after dropping out of a PhD) is a smart, stinging satire that unfolds in a grotesque version of the film and television world, a world that displays its commitment to inclusion and diversity like decorative bunting. It’s a heightened caricature, certainly, but there are uncomfortable truths underpinning the surreal excesses.

  • In UK and Irish cinemas

Watch a trailer for In Camera.
 

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