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On the evening of her 18th birthday, Molly Dawes finds herself drunk and is sick in the doorway of an army recruitment office. She looks into the window of the office and sees a life-sized photograph of an army girl, everything that Molly isn't but wants to be - respected. The following morning, Molly finds herself back in the recruitment office and is eventually persuaded to complete an aptitude test. No-one thinks she can stick it out, including herself. But slowly and surely, Molly is maturing and learning to believe in herself. She digs in and finds a strength that she never thought she had.

Lacey Turner as  Molly Dawes
Matthew McNulty as  Corporal Geddings
Kerry Godliman as  Belinda Dawes
Sean Gallagher as  Dave Dawes
Katherine Pearce as  Katy
Mimi Keene as  Jade Dawes
McKell David as  Dean
Frieda Thiel as  Proud Mary
Cecilia Noble as  Elizabeth
Andrew Scarborough as  Sergeant Peters

Reviews

Prismark10
2013/03/23

Our Girl started as a one off film written by Tony Grounds before it was developed by the BBC as a regular television series.Lacey Turner is Molly Dawes, a teenager in Newham, living in an overcrowded house with her siblings. Mum (Kerry Godliman) is pregnant again, Dad (Sean Gallagher) is a bit of a layabout and an unpleasant racist and sexist of the east end type.Molly's boyfriend is a young Muslim who also is another worthless individual who easily cheats on her and really does not value her.So Molly who looks like a bright girl, seems to already have a life which is taking her nowhere with people who are just shiftless. Molly ends up joining the army which gives her life purpose and self esteem.The problem is her family and boyfriend are left befuddled by her decision.However basic training allows her to turn her life around and give her life renewed purpose as she makes new friends and finds out that it is better to help out fellow recruits rather than be a put upon babysitter at home.The series started out with a lot of grittiness of inner London domestic life. Lacey Turner puts in a convincing performance as Molly and it is a refreshing positive portrayal of army life, not sure whether it is very realistic vision of army life and does felt a bit like propaganda as well.Yet the film was better than the subsequent series in my opinion and at least it offered a positive note that a person can have the courage of their convictions to turn their life around.

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davideo-2
2013/03/24

STAR RATING: ***** Saturday Night **** Friday Night *** Friday Morning ** Sunday Night * Monday MorningMollie Dawes (Lacey Turner) is a typically (or so East Enders would have you believe) upfront, balsy South London girl, whose life is a bit of a shambles, what with an abusive father, cheating immigrant lover and false friends. One night, after throwing up at the entrance to an Army Recruitment Centre, she believes she's found the key that can turn her life around. Despite no encouragement from all those around her, she plods on with it, in time her cocky front broken down and built back up again to build her in to a better character.There are those ex East Enders who simply fade in to obscurity and are lucky to be seen performing panto again, and those who seem determined to make their post Walford career in to something a bit more lively. Lacey Turner would seem to be one such example, appearing in this ambitious one off BBC drama, that feels pretty workmanlike and unsurprising for the most part, but still has the odd flashes of class to raise itself up. It opens in a depressingly familiar environment from where a lot of these gritty kitchen sink dramas tend to start in, and feels so unsurprising because most of the characters behave in exactly the way you expect them to, not all that convincingly played by all the performers. As the main character, the vast bulk of it rests on Turner's shoulders, and she is the one we're kept with till the end, on the way incurring a rather shocking, gratuitous sex scene that comes out of nowhere, on to the end which ends on a more touching and poignant note than you might expect. It's an interesting and well written role, and had it had a bigger budget and maybe some better actors and director, it could have been even more than it is. But as it is, you still can't see Turner's, quite possibly one of 'the squaire's' better performers, post EE career going belly up if she keeps going with meaty stuff like this. ***

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gerald-mears
2013/03/25

I must say that this Film 'Our Girl' is one of the most compelling things i have watched for a very long time. I felt it was so fantastic that i have watched it several times this week and i have expressed the same emotion (cry) every time i have watched it. Lucy Turner takes the title role of a London girl who has a very chaotic life who feels that she wants more from it than she and those around her have. She ends up in an Army recruitment office and the story of how she ends up there becomes clear as you watch the film. As the film progresses and i felt that it was compelling watching you see Molly Dawes (Lucy Turners character name) change her outlook on life and develop qualities and attributes which she had always had but she was not aware of them.Her friendship with Katie a fellow recruit who came from Leyland who had self confidence issues and how they helped each other achieve what they both wanted was an added bonus to this story. The very moving way that the corporal brought the best out of Molly was well done. This whole film is worth watching time and time again and each time i watch it i can see so many different things that the writers wanted to express and bring to our screens. The ending of this film is so well written and acted that my tears flowed even more. Well done BBC and Lucy and everyone who brought this to our viewing. I must say that after watching this I sent a text to each of my three daughters telling them how very proud of them i am and what they have each achieved in life which was not always easy for them either. This Film is a must watch. I know it was only a one off film but if the BBC were to do a series on Molly Dawes i feel it would be compelling viewing.

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ianlouisiana
2013/03/26

At one time 18 year old Molly Dawes wouldn't have had to join the Army in order to find her place in her own culture.Like many girls from Newham(or East Ham and West Ham as it was called before the GLC decided to foist its discredited political ideals on its unwilling constituents),she would have found friendship,loyalty and comradeship on the factory floor at Bryant and May,Fords,Yardleys and other mass employers of East London's working community. But of course,only Ford remains,and that in much emasculated form thanks to the Union - busting Tories and the self - loathing Labour politicians who feared the solidarity of the working people they were supposed to represent and deliberately set out to destroy their culture where it represented a threat to their plans for a liberal and more "enlightened" society. So Molly, a victim of Shirley Williams' Comprehensive Education,no qualifications,no ambition,no role - models except a feckless bullying father and a weak cowering mother seems set fair to be somebody's Babymother with a lifetime of Benefits to look forward to.Indeed her parents fully expect her to accept that role uncomplainingly,but she has a spark of defiance,a vision for her future beyond working in a Nailbar and pinching the odd few quid to finance her dad's boozing. After a particularly bad night out she staggers along the street and vomits on the pavement outside an Army Recruiting Office."Be the best",says a poster in the window.Knowing that in all probability vomiting on the pavement was as good as it was ever going to get for her,the next morning she drags herself back to the office and begins the process that redeems her. The tragedy of "Our Girl"is that Molly feels that her life would be better fulfilled dying in Afghanistan among her fellow soldiers and perhaps "with my name being read out by the Queen - that would be fun"as she writes in her "Death Letter". Surrounded by friends who would give their life for her,she sets off on patrol as a Medical Technician:better to live for a day like a lion than a month like a lamb. The BBC should be proud that really what is quite a reactionary concept by early 21st century standards is given airtime.

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