Packed with meaningful glares, unspoken acrimony and suppressed emotions, this ensemble melodrama might have worked better had it been made as a womens picture back in the 1940s.
Inspired by her own mothers experiences, Angela Workmans screenplay has the advantage of exploring one of the few uncharted aspects of World War II.
But Cockney seamstress Anna Friels struggle to acclimatise to backwater Alberta and her dour country in-laws, after she marries Canadian serviceman Aden Young following a whirlwind romance, always feels as though its trapped somewhere between a penny dreadful and a teleplay. Brenda Fricker and Molly Parker are stubbornly restrained as Youngs no-nonsense mother and self-pitying, polio-afflicted sister, leaving Friels shift from chirpy lovesickness to flinty resentment to bring a flicker of life to the puritanical playing.