Watching Eric Liddle’s ‘Mister Swolo’ is like taking a joyride into an absolutely bizarre dream that makes perfect sense only while it exists. Two friends, Harrison Charge (Jack Anderson) and Peter Short (newcomer Gary Bannon) embark on a road trip and have themselves hijacked by the creation of Harrison: Mister Swolo! Harrison, a comic artist, drawing Marvel and DC inspired superhero figures into his shiny blue sketchbook becomes the Aladdin who unleashes the genie from his lamp…
With the coming-to-life of the eponymous Mister Swolo (played by Ryan Caldwell), the film comes to life as well, getting wackier by the minute and you thoroughly enjoy it. Mister Swolo is delightfully creepy and terrifying, and Caldwell does a brilliant job at portraying his traits and mannerisms. Both Anderson and Bannon are natural in their roles, balancing absurdity with grounded reactions tinged with a hint of teenage clumsiness.
Featuring a primarily yellow palette, the film benefits immensely from Jakub Sirkowski’s grading as the colour adeptly reflects the increasing bizarreness; it begins with sombre shades and blends out onto sickly, stark yellows. It is dazzling but unfriendly, much like the lush Glen Coe, beset by the sinister Swolo.
Setting aside a continuity error and some botched dubbing, Mister Swolo is an excellent work of comedy; as creative and absurd as Liddle promised.
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Watch Mister Swolo Short Film Trailer