Lollipop movie review (2025) | Little White Lies

Lol­lipop review – a gut-punch­ing debut

09 Jun 2025 / Released: 13 Jun 2025

Two women sitting on a bed surrounded by clutter and personal items.
Two women sitting on a bed surrounded by clutter and personal items.
3

Anticipation.

A social realist drama with promising newcomers.

4

Enjoyment.

Posy Sterling is a formidable driving force.

4

In Retrospect.

Hits all the right notes, devastating and hopeful.

Daisy-May Hudson’s impres­sive fic­tion debut lays bare the bureau­crat­ic cycles a young woman has to face as she attempts to regain cus­tody of her children.

The past cou­ple of years have seen an influx of women film­mak­ers bring­ing time­ly, work­ing-class sto­ries to the big screen with lived rev­er­ence and fresh tal­ent, from Rocks to Scrap­per to Bird. The lat­est addi­tion to this new social real­ist niche is Lol­lipop, a gut-punch­ing debut from writer-direc­tor Daisy-May Hud­son. The film fol­lows Mol­ly (Posy Ster­ling), a young moth­er released from jail but placed in a dif­fer­ent prison when she tries to reunite with her chil­dren, who are being held in fos­ter care. She finds her­self in a hell­ish Catch-22: she can’t gain cus­tody of her chil­dren with­out a roof over her head, but she can’t get a house via state assis­tance because her kids don’t live with her.

Hudson’s sharp film, inspired by her own expe­ri­ences, pas­sion­ate­ly takes aim at the pit­falls and para­dox­es of the social care sys­tem. After painful­ly short super­vised vis­its with her chil­dren and miss­ing out on key moments of their growth, Mol­ly reach­es a break­ing point. Hud­son iso­lates Mol­ly when her con­sci­en­tious smile cracks as, off-screen, the voic­es of social work­ers dic­tate that her chil­dren will remain in fos­ter care until she has sort­ed her­self out. Cin­e­matog­ra­ph­er Jaime Ack­royd frames Mol­ly through the worker’s legs, like the bars of a cell. Sterling’s restrained per­for­mance trans­forms into some­thing explo­sive; anger crum­bles into dev­as­ta­tion as the sys­tem repeat­ed­ly and harsh­ly fails her. You need to do more for me,” she begs, only to be met with: There’s noth­ing more I can do.”

Though some of the film’s most dev­as­tat­ing moments occur inside the coun­cil office, it’s also where Mol­ly reunites with her great­est sup­port­er, col­lege friend Ami­na (Idil Ahmed), who is liv­ing in a hos­tel for home­less fam­i­lies. Both women are sol­diers fight­ing with a fierce love for their chil­dren. Their sis­ter­hood inter­rupts the solemn tone as they find pock­ets of joy amid the dev­as­ta­tion, gos­sip­ing in bed and danc­ing to UK garage music.

These moments high­light the dis­tinct absence of men in Lol­lipop, bar Molly’s 5‑year-old son Leo (Luke Howitt). The com­pan­ion­ship of oth­er women is the foun­da­tion of Molly’s life, under­scored by the chal­leng­ing rela­tion­ships with the all-women care work­ers or her over­bear­ing but inat­ten­tive moth­er, Sylvie (Ter­ri­Ann Cousins).

The impres­sive nature of the per­form­ers is thanks to cast­ing direc­tor Lucy Pardee, who recog­nised Sterling’s pow­er­house lead­ing poten­tial but also dis­cov­ered the bril­liance of Tegan-Mia Stan­ley Rhoads. The lat­ter, who plays Molly’s 11-year-old daugh­ter Ava, takes cen­tre stage when she tear­ful­ly pleads with her moth­er to obey the rules to avoid get­ting in more trou­ble. But Mol­ly is des­per­ate. The moth­er-daugh­ter back-and-forths are sen­si­tive­ly penned and down­right heart-wrench­ing to wit­ness. It’s a stark reminder of the pain caused by a sys­tem that slash­es wel­fare spend­ing and demands a per­son to jump through hoops with their legs tied. Hudson’s film makes room to acknowl­edge that this is a fam­i­ly affair. Mol­ly is at the epi­cen­tre, but the rever­ber­a­tions impact every­one around her.

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