A well-crafted chamber piece interested in fame, trauma, and performative allyship, “I’ll Show You Mine” works towards a well-earned breakthrough for its audience and characters yet does little with it once secured.
A true two-hander, the film by director Megan Griffiths gives off theater vibes, harkening back to Samuel Beckett and even Edward Albee with its conversational backbone and philosophical underpinnings.
This one’s got fun characters working through intriguing stuff, to be sure, yet neither the ultimate substance of the narrative nor the form in which it is presented mark it as particularly notable.
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