The film stars Laura Harrier with Bria Vinaite, Kate Dickie, Tamsin Egerton, Freya Mavor, and Shauna Macdonald in major supporting roles.
[3] Caitlin, who grew up in New York before her family moved to Scotland, attends the funeral of her father, Leonard.
The next day, giving a lecture on abstract expressionism, Fiona tells the class that women have been overlooked and written out of history in the art books.
She accepts, and they talk about art as they view the pieces, agreeing that the time for it to be decorative is past—art should be what you see in the street each day.
Mary, meanwhile, who is also an artist, is struggling to get back to work after Leonard’s death, and likewise trashes her creation.
Caitlin gets a text message on her phone and rushes home to see her mum and finds her passed out, drunk.
Both couples wind up back at the house, making out in Caitlin and Hannah’s respective bedrooms, though Rory is too drunk for things to progress.
Caitlin returns home to see her mum and pour out her heart, admitting that she feels threatened by Stacey.
For the class’s final lecture, they are visited by Turner Prize-winning Scottish artist Catherine Hendricks, who talks of how her troubled life and celebrated art intersect.
Catherine informs her that its meaning will change over the years, and then invites Caitlin to be her assistant on a project in London.
[5] In October 2018, Laura Harrier, Bria Vinaite, Lily Newmark, Freya Mavor, Tamsin Egerton, Kate Dickie and Scott Miller joined the cast of the film.
[8] It is scheduled to be released in the United Kingdom on August 2, 2019, by Pinpoint (Film Distribution UK) Ltd.[9] A special event screening was confirmed at venues across the UK and Ireland on August 1, 2019 which featured an exclusive short acoustic set from the band Biffy Clyro and a Q&A session with cast members Laura Harrier and Bria Vinaite and director, Jamie Adams.