Holes by Tom Basden

There’s plenty to enjoy in this episodic, site-specific play. But as a a complete piece of drama, though, it’s just a little lost at sea.

★★★
theatre review (edinburgh) | Read in About 2 minutes
Published 06 Aug 2013
33328 large
121329 original

We’re not going to give away the “secret location” of Holes by Tom Basden, save to say that you’ll need to ring-fence the best part of four hours in your congested Fringe diary for the round-trip. It’s one of the more impressively-staged festival destinations, though: a two-tiered, in-the-round audience circling a lofted, sand-filled stage crowned by a huge sun, whose fiery glare gradually warms our four actors to boiling point.

A BA passenger plane bound for Sydney has crash-landed on a remote island. A quartet of survivors include Gus, Marie and Ian, all colleagues from the same inane corporation; and Erin, a teenager. How did it happen? And can the group coalesce to stay alive?

There’s plenty to enjoy in the early exchanges as Basden/the cast exercise their comic chops via wildly polarised reactions to their predicament, or another “transport cock-up”, as Marie chirpily observes. Indeed, Basden sure can drop a knuckleheaded, crowd-pleasing punchline (“there are no such things as lesbians, they’re just trying to be clever”, insists Ian), but as the wheels come off for the dysfunctional foursome, the mid-section sags under the weight of excessive Four Pints of Lager…-esque barroom banter.

Even when the screwball comedy subsides and Holes… changes tack, that off-the-shelf desert island plot device resolves itself in sub-William Golding territory with a bit of whimper.

As a series of episodic encounters, Holes… is admittedly great fun, abetted by a uniformly strong cast, clearly enjoying their broadly drawn characters; as a complete piece of drama, though, it’s just a little lost at sea.