Here is a film that understands that the greatest stakes are personal. ‘Lollipop’ forgoes melodrama for a clear-eyed, often heartbreaking look at motherhood and survival. Posy Sterling’s performance is a revelation, a nuanced portrait of a woman trying…
Lollipop
Molly, a young woman released from prison struggles to regain custody of her children. When she bumps into her childhood friend Amina the two women soon realize their…
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‘Lollipop’ is a worthy drama with a strong social conscience, though its execution sometimes lacks subtlety. The performances are uniformly commendable, with Idil Ahmed bringing a particularly compelling resilience to Amina. The plot, however, follows a fairly conventional…
A masterclass in tension built from character, not contrivance. ‘Lollipop’ had me gripped from its first moments, not with action, but with the palpable weight of Molly’s impossible situation. The film meticulously dismantles any easy judgements, presenting two…
This drama’s strength lies in its compelling central premise and the potent chemistry between its leads. Sterling and Ahmed share a credible, worn-in dynamic that makes their desperate pact entirely believable. The film is at its best in…
‘Lollipop’ is a bruising and profoundly empathetic piece of Australian cinema. Posy Sterling delivers a career-defining performance as Molly, her every silence screaming with a mother’s anguish. The reunion with Idil Ahmed’s Amina feels less like nostalgia and…
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The film taps directly into urgent national conversations about incarceration rates, women's experiences in the justice system, and the fraught processes of family reunification. By centring on two women from diverse backgrounds, it promises a nuanced look at intersectional disadvantage. For Australian viewers, its setting and social context will not feel abstract or foreign but intimately connected to local headlines and community concerns, offering a dramatic lens on systemic issues that are often discussed in policy terms but rarely felt so personally on screen.