
Laila, a girl on the run from her family is hiding out in West Yorkshire with her drifter boyfriend Aaron. When her brother arrives in town with a gang of thugs in tow, she is forced to flee for her life and faces her darkest night.... (Full plot summary below)
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Laila, a girl on the run from her family is hiding out in West Yorkshire with her drifter boyfriend Aaron. When her brother arrives in town with a gang of thugs in tow, she is forced to flee for her life and faces her darkest night.
Leave your thoughts about Catch Me Daddy.
| Financial TimesNigel AndrewsThe largely unknown cast's performances are exactly right: mimed distillations of moments of being and feeling. |
| Flick FilosopherMaryAnn JohansonA lurid meatgrinder of a movie in which the young-woman protagonist is reduced to a passive object of male rage, greed, and possessiveness. |
| Movie TalkJason BestDaniel Wolfe and his brother Matthew create an almost relentlessly grim mood, with the odd moments of tenderness and humour quickly cancelled out by bursts of sickening violence. |
| Film Ireland MagazineDee O'DonoghueDaniel Wolfe is quick to delineate the gendered nature of honour killings and a cultural framework that deifies a son and demonises a daughter. |
| Movie MezzanineTomris LafflyCatch Me Daddy is a gripping account of a troubled night for two lovers on the run. |
| HeyUGuysStefan PapeTo call this title intense would be something of an understatement, in what is a brutally disquieting watch. |
| Observer (UK)Mark KermodeSome may find it intolerable, but this latterday western has much more to offer than misery. |
| Empire MagazineNev PierceA bold and uncompromising debut feature from a bright new directing team. There’s a question over whether it justifies its own misery, but if you care about homegrown cinema then you have to see it. |
| Total FilmKevin HarleyBlending the mythical resonances of The Searchers with lyricism and bristly realism, Wolfe’s harrowing, haunting dispatch from Brit-cinema’s undergrowth is strong meat: emphatic evidence of a bold talent’s arrival. |
| Fan The FireNick DeigmanWolfe's singular vision of hopeless destruction finds its muse in this charming and powerful young actress (Ahmed). Her strength will pull out what is left of your breath like a vacuum, and leave you stumbling for the exits in need of respite. |