With the precision of a scalpel and the unpredictability of a slammed door, Cul-de-Sac is a witty and wine-soaked post-mortem dissection of contemporary Britain, in which Shopland peels back the layers of Millennial civility with unflinching honesty. Tackling everything from cultural identity to the ever-increasing price of a London pint, Cul-de-Sac gives voice to the broken millennial suburbanite experience. It’s a story about people finding themselves in the middle: middle-age, middle-class, neither urban nor rural, mid-journey in their careers and mid-journey in their existences.
Located in Northwood Hills, Zone 6 London, otherwise referred to as The Middle of Nowhere, we meet four characters: Ruth is questioning every decision she’s ever made; Simon is grappling with a personality he can’t quite define; Marie is keeping a secret that could shatter everything and Frank, who just desperately wants his driveway back. What starts as a quiet evening rapidly unravels, as polite smiles give way to sharp words, truths spill as freely as the booze, and when an unexpected guest arrives, the night explodes into chaos. Cul-de-Sac pulls back the net curtains on the quiet desperation of suburbia like never seen before.
Writer and Director David Shopland comments, Millennials often feel trapped between worlds; we grew with technology, we weren’t born into the technological age. We straddle the past and the future in a way unique perhaps to any other generation given the acceleration of, well, everything. I think because of this, a lot of us feel lost. A lot of us stumbled into lives that actually weren’t meant for us, and a lot of us didn’t realise until it was far too late. I wanted to spend a night looking through the window at some of these people. I wanted to do it with humour, and I wanted to do it with objectivity.