Meet Bob Kenner. Bob’s a normal guy. He lives in a quiet neighborhood called Peckham in southeast London. He goes for walks on the high street and his neighbors know him. He sings (quite poorly) in a church choir. He opens jars for people. He’s a bit socially awkward and a bit lonely. He’s kind and he makes mistakes, sometimes he says the wrong thing, but he always apologizes when he does. He’s completely normal. Just like you or I. Well, for the good of the world, I don’t sing. I prefer to spare people from that. But in most other respects, Bob’s as regular as the next person.
Except, well, a meteor struck London and gave him superpowers and now he acts as the world’s only superhero, being deployed by the British government and Ministry of Defense to help aid the world with disasters and the like. There are no supervillains, he doesn’t have a rogues gallery. He has a small house in Peckham, a mother in a care home, and a housekeeper who’s his only friend. And your basic suite of superpowers; super strength, invulnerability, and flight. But most importantly, he’s got a date. Let’s get into 2015’s British indie rom-com, SuperBob.
SuperBob has been having some PR issues lately, which I’m sure you’re bound to when you crash about and break stuff. In this instance, the villain here is a US Senator who has developed a vendetta against Bob after he tried to poach him for the US government and Bob didn’t go along with it. So Bob’s boss at the MOD, Theresa Ford, played by Catherine Tate (The Office, Going Dutch), hires a documentary crew to follow him on his day off. The goal here is to humanize Bob, so people think of him as a person and not just a cape. Bob, played by Brett Goldstein (Ted Lasso, Shrinking), forgot about this, so the first time we really get to see him on camera is when he opens up the front door and is immediately awkward in front of the doc crew. How uncomfortable he gets is instantly endearing (and yes, it helps that the many hours I’ve watched Goldstein as Roy Kent makes me inclined to like him, but he’s a likable character even independent of that) and you can tell he just wasn’t really meant to be in the spotlight. In superhero films, there’s often this idea of heroism being thrust upon people and them rising to the occasion. Bruce Wayne didn’t ask to be traumatized by his parents’ murder. Clark Kent didn’t ask to be sent to a planet where he’d be nigh invulnerable to escape his own local apocalypse. Peter Parker didn’t…you get the idea. But in the end, they all stepped up and found the hero inside them (in wildly different ways) and they embrace that role as a hero and role model.
Well, Bob didn’t ask for a meteor to fall on Peckham and give him superpowers. And he seems to do the superheroing well, especially in a world where there are no other superheroes and he doesn’t really have free will in what he responds to because he works for the UK government. I feel like if someone had shown SuperBob to Tony Stark, we could have avoided that whole Civil War he had with Captain America, because Bob’s ability to do good is severely hindered by having to go through a governmental buffer. To Bob, being a superhero isn’t something he loves or wants to do to be an example or anything like that. To Bob, being a superhero is just a job. It’s another fact of life in a mundane existence that’s punctuated on occasion by moments of the fantastic. He goes where he’s sent and he does what he’s order to do by the Theresa and the MOD. But, as much as I could go on about the politics of superheroing, that’s not really what this movie is about. It’s certainly not not about that, but since it is February, I want to focus on the other aspect of this film. It’s somewhat sneakily a rom-com.
It doesn’t look like one on its face, but the movie takes place on Tuesday, Bob’s day off. And after months of crushing on June, he tries to work up the courage to ask her out. June, played by Laura Haddock (Guardians of the Galaxy), works at the local library in Peckham, is sweet and passionate about books. Which is good, given her career, and through months of wayward wooing, Bob finally reads her favorite book, House of Leaves, by Mark Z. Danielewski (who liked one of my tweets once) and details the unique reading experience of that novel. I have a copy of it sitting on a corner of my desk, I am going to get to it (I’ve started it before, but it is freaky) and if you’re familiar with the book, his description of it is rather hilarious. But for a guy who flies headfirst into danger on the reg, asking June on a date turns out to be a greater challenge than he’s previously faced and she asks him first. Adorable. He’s like a slightly less fuzzy Paddington sometimes, I love it.
Bob’s only friend is Dorris, played by Natalia Tena (Game of Thrones, The Mandalorian), who also happens to be his housekeeper who works at the retirement home where his mother lives. The relationship between these two is unbelievably sweet—Dorris seems to be the only person in the world who treats Bob like a regular person. She makes fun of him, she sees him for the hopelessly awkward guy that he his, and she genuinely cares about him and his mom, which is really nice. Bob needs that kind of normalcy in his life and she’s always there to gently bring him back down to Earth. And sometimes not so gently; but sometimes a friend has to be the one to say things that you might not necessarily want to hear and that’s exactly what Dorris does for Bob. Their relationship is lovely and sweet and I couldn’t get enough of it. Whenever they were on screen together, not only were their interactions always funny, they were also always sincere. In an interview, writer and director Jon Dever said that through the many iterations of the story, they settled on wanting to make something that was nice. He wanted to make a sweet, funny film that leaves you feeling good at the end.
And in that goal, SuperBob most definitely delivers. Comedy is always hard to talk about because the best way to make a joke not be funny is to describe the joke and then explain why it was funny. But there are so many subtly comedic moments in SuperBob that I found myself really, really laughing a lot despite sitting with a pen in hand, taking notes. Brett Goldstein is so good here. My introduction to him was Roy Kent, so I was used to him being very gruff, lovably caustic, and bitingly harsh, and this was a completely new look for me. He brings this sweetness to the role that you wouldn’t expect from a superhero. Or from Roy Kent. It comes as no surprise that he’s funny, because he was the vehicle for so many of Ted Lasso’s funniest moments, but the manner in which he does it is so refreshing. I watched the original short on which this movie is based and you can see where it all came from; this notion of someone who doesn’t have the personality type you typically associate with being a hero who nonetheless has these incredible powers and wants to good with them. Although, funnily, in the original short, he name drops other heroes like Batman and Superman, which is a concept they smartly cut from the feature.
Natalia Tena is also excellent here as Dorris, who came to England to save up money so she could go back to Colombia and open a nursery. I ran into some terminology here; nursery can mean so many things and British terms don’t always line up with American English, but I gather that she means she wants to take care of children and not plants. Why that word means both a daycare and a place where you buy plants, I’ll never know, but I do remember a very confusing exchange with my mother as a small boy when she said we going to the nursery to pick something up and it was a houseplant and not a new little brother or sister (I was very young, we’re talking believing in stork delivery age). Either way, Dorris is such a great character played with great care by Tena and she’s absolutely the heart and soul of the film. Tate and Haddock do well with smaller, but still very important roles. It’s a more reserved performance from Catherine Tate here, but it still needed that veteran comedic timing she has.
I wanted to look at rom-coms this February because a lot of times, they get discounted as highly gendered films that are often fluffy garbage. That’s not what this is. There’s definite emotional heft here, as SuperBob takes a look at different kinds of love and the things that get in the way and how much it’s worth going for when you have it. In the end, Bob’s not a weapon and he’s not a superhero; he’s just a person. When Theresa Ford hires a documentary crew to humanize him, well, it’s very effective. You see Bob as a man first, not a superman. He’s just a guy with wants, hopes, dreams, and a desire to love and be loved. And that’s really something, as Dever would put it, quite nice. It makes him incredibly relatable for a man who’s invulnerable and can fly. There’s some subtle messaging here too, which you should be able to experience without me drawing it out into an additional essay about the importance of being able to love who you love, but those are the kinds of things that set it apart from other more paint-by-numbers rom-coms. This is one you can watch with someone on Valentine’s Day or by yourself on a random Tuesday night and it will be just as enjoyable and just as life-affirming. And it’ll still be just as funny, which is great, because it’s very funny. And at just 1 hour, 22 minutes, it’s a comedy that knows how long to be in your life. It’s a short, sweet movie that is delightful and rewatchable and a hidden gem that I highly recommend.