The proposal

A clever little two-hander, Ian Robertson’s The Proposal details how a relationship is tested in the strangest of situation; a restaurant robbery. It’s a high concept premise that feels almost hackey in its set-up: a proposal goes awry, when the “hidden ring” is snatched by a faceless robber. But, Robertson’s execution is the opposite of kitsch. He makes the bold stylistic choice to never really show the actual stick-up. After all, that’s all background noise for the “real” drama: the relationship that is being tested center screen. The Proposal works because while the actual situation is over-the-top, the character conversation between these two people isn’t. There’s real heart in the dialogue: each person coming to terms with the “next step” of their relationship and what that truly means. Of course, the serious conversation is peppered with terrific comedic moments, which largely come from the unseen robbery. The sound design is what really sells because you don’t actually see much. Robertson also mines several other comic details, from language barrier jokes to the subtle symbolism of the central dessert, creme caramel, as an overly saccharine expression of romance.

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