Jimpa is a 2025 drama film co-produced and directed by Sophie Hyde, who co-wrote it with Matthew Cormack. The film stars Olivia Colman, Aud Mason-Hyde and John Lithgow.
Jimpa had its premiere at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival on 23 January 2025.
Some filming took place in Adelaide in March 2024, including one scene at a café in the East End, which stands in for Amsterdam. Further scenes were shot in Amsterdam and then Helsinki, Finland. Post-production took place in Adelaide.
The story is partly based on Hyde's own family history, with Colman's role as Hannah playing a fictionalised version of Hyde, of which Hyde has said, "In some ways, that was the character that I always felt was least taken from life – but maybe that's just because it's me". Hyde said that Jimpa is in some ways a companion film to her debut feature, 52 Tuesdays (2013), which charts a relationship with her father as they undergo gender transition. At its Australian premiere at the Adelaide Film Festival, Hyde revealed that her father (who died in 2018) had never gone to live in Amsterdam. He had, however, left his family. Aud Mason-Hyde, who plays Frances in the film, is the child of Hyde and Bryan Mason (who edited the film), and is non-binary.
The score was composed by Sydney-based singer, songwriter, producer, and composer Nick Ward. Matthew Chuang was cinematographer, and Bryan Mason edited the film.
The closing credits are accompanied by a cover of MUNA's "I know a place", sung by Australian singer-songwriter Brendan Maclean and Aud Mason-Hyde. Mason-Hyde also sings solo during the film.
Following the Sundance premiere, it was reported that the film was struggling to find a US distributor, with some citing the rise in anti-LGBTQ rhetoric in the country following the second inauguration of Donald Trump as a reason for the lack of studio interest. The film has since been picked up for release in the US by distributor Kino Lorber who partnered with Hyde on her first film, 52 Tuesdays.
The film is being distributed in Australia by Sydney-based Kismet Movies, and in Europe by Netherlands-based Cinéart.
Peter Debruge, writing in Variety, calls the film "category-defying", and said that Lithgow's role was his richest since The World According to Garp. Chase Hutchinson, writing for TheWrap, wrote that Hyde "captured a life...about as fully as one could ever hope to do", and that the film is "not just incisive and compassionate, but fully attuned to the rhythms of this modern family". He writes that Olivia Colman and John Lithgow "soar" in the film, but reserves particular praise for Aud Mason-Hyde, saying that they are "a breakout star". He also praises the cinematography by Matthew Chuang.
After the film's Adelaide premiere, Stephen A. Russell, writing in ScreenHub Australia, gave the film 4 out of 5 stars, praising the acting (Mason-Hyde is "revelatory"; "the brilliant Box exaggerates her brassy Australianness with fizzing fabulousness") as well as many aspects of the film production, including direction, cinematography, musical score, and editing. He writes that Hyde "explores family dynamics with sensitivity and subtlety", in this "meta-textually sumptuous reckoning with her upbringing, which freely and fictitiously rewrites that narrative".
Heather Taylor Johnson, writing in InDaily, says that the writers (Hyde and McCormack) are "interested in spotlighting an intergenerational queer family in which people love one another unconditionally and are proud of one another, where they choose how to live their lives fearlessly, with openness and love and boundless support". She highlights one of the questions posed by Hannah, whether drama can exist without conflict, and concludes that it can.
Release
Reception
Critics' reviews after Sundance were mostly lukewarm, praising the performances of Colman and Lithgow, but suggesting that Hyde tries to cover too much ground, resulting in a meandering plot. Robert Daniels writing on RogerEbert.com, criticised the film's lack of nuance and subtlety, and called it a "sprawling endeavor" that lacks focus.
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