DMovies - Your platform for thought-provoking cinema

Support The Girls

The general manager of the Double Whammies sports bar must contend with all human life in the course of a particularly trying day - American comedy is now also available on BFI Player

General manager Lisa (Regina Hall) unlocks the premises for another day’s work at the Double Whammies sports bar. Maci (Haley Lu Richardson) tells Lisa there’s a strange banging sound coming from the room with the safe. Maybe a trapped possum? Lisa will investigate. Meanwhile, though, she’s got to interview some young women for waitress posts. And she needs to get Danyelle (Shayna McHayle) to sweet talk Jay (John Elvis) from Sounds Town into lending them a sound system for tonight’s big fight on cable. On top of that, she’s running a car wash fundraiser under the moniker “Support The Girls” to help out Shaina (Jana Kramer) who’s in trouble.

Welcome to the world of Double Whammies. It’s an essay on boundaries. Lisa continually refers to Double Whammies as a “family place” and the institution walks a fine line between bare-midriffed young women in skimpy tops sporting curves and cleavage bearing the words “Double Whammies” and something altogether far dirtier. “They know where to find a strip joint if that’s what they wanted,” she says. She has issues with the rules laid out by the white male owner who hires her to do the daily hands on management of the place, presumably so he doesn’t have to do it himself.

Early on, Lisa and Maci run an interview with several applicants for waitress positions. We watch as they demonstrate any number of sales routines to put the customers at ease and keep their behaviour the right side of acceptable. Throughout the day, we watch the new girls deal with abusive customers as Lisa struggles to keep them on the right side of the that line, mostly successfully. At the same time, she’s has the cops in to deal with a thief who got trapped in the air vent whilst trying to access the company safe and damaged the cable TV feed needed for the evening’s aforementioned big fight, leaving Lisa the headache of getting the cable company to reconnect everything. Then she has to go for a long drive with her boss the owner who doesn’t think she’s running the place properly.

This boasts a clutch of fantastic performances from Regina Hall and Haley Lu Richardson downwards, not to mention the wonderful Lea DeLaria as the butch Bobo, a woman not to be messed with. More importantly it’s a superb script solidly directed with a real understanding of how actors can bring words on a page to life on a screen. A microcosm of the American Dream and some very ordinary, down to Earth women trying to survive within it, there’s a real freshness about it. An absolute must see.

Support The Girls is out in the UK on Friday, June 28th. On VoD on Monday, October 28th. On BFI Player from Monday, September 27th 2021.


By Jeremy Clarke - 27-06-2019

Jeremy Clarke has been writing about movies in various UK print publications since the late 1980s as well as online in recent years. He’s excited by movies which provoke audiences, upset convent...

DMovies Poll

Are the Oscars dirty enough for DMovies?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Most Read

Sexual diversity is at the very heart of [Read More...]
Just a few years back, finding a film [Read More...]
Forget Friday the 13th, Paranormal Activity and the [Read More...]
A lot of British people would rather forget [Read More...]
QUICK AND DIRTY: LIVE FROM TALLINN A candidate’s [Read More...]
Pigs might fly. And so Brexit might happen. [Read More...]

Read More

Gloria Bell

Sebastián Lelio
2018

Jeremy Clarke - 04-06-2019

Lelio remakes his Chilean drama about the eponymous 50-something divorcee with Julianne Moore in the title role - in cinemas from Friday, June 7th [Read More...]

Sometimes Always Never

Carl Hunter
2019

- 09-06-2019

Tragedy turns into amusement, in this elaborate trinket of British filmmaking dealing with scrabble and starring a magnificent Bill Nighy - now available on VoD [Read More...]

Tucked

Jamie Patterson
2018

Jeremy Clarke - 14-05-2019

An ageing drag queen dying of cancer with weeks to live takes a younger, new kid on the block under his wing - British film dealing with gender fluidity and death is now available on Netflix! [Read More...]