
Polly dreams of making it as an actor, but those dreams are shattered when her identical twin sister Amy lands the lead role in a huge TV show. Mistaken for her famous sister at every turn, Polly decides to use Amy's celebrity for her own advantage - free clothes, free booze, casual sex - with hilarious and disastrous consequences for them both.... (Full plot summary below)
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Polly dreams of making it as an actor, but those dreams are shattered when her identical twin sister Amy lands the lead role in a huge TV show. Mistaken for her famous sister at every turn, Polly decides to use Amy's celebrity for her own advantage - free clothes, free booze, casual sex - with hilarious and disastrous consequences for them both.
Leave your thoughts about That's Not Me.
| DeciderLea Palmieri'That's Not Me' manages to remain as hopeful as it is grounded and as cheeky as it is awkward... |
| GuardianLuke BuckmasterA deceptively sophisticated character study about a person coming to terms with their dreams - and what those dreams (in acting parlance, "making it") mean for those who have achieved them. |
| AWFJ Women on FilmAlexandra Heller-NicholasThat's Not Me strikes a perfect balance between silly and smart, accessible and fantastic, and local and global that make it in many ways one of the most promising and original Australian films in years |
| The AustralianStephen RomeiThis is a clever, funny, perceptive movie that pokes its nose into the bizarre business of filmmaking, and the sometimes wacky world of sibling rivalry. |
| The Sunday AgeCraig MathiesonThe film profits from both the cosmic cruelty of someone physically the same being perceived so differently and the lead's note-perfect facial expressions of disbelief. |
| Adelaide ReviewDavid 'Mad Dog' BradleyWhile Australian comedies have, in recent times, proven a sad and sorry lot, That's Not Me is a now-rare exception, with a strain of genuine humour running throughout, even if it's often of a neurotic, even traumatic sort. |
| Herald Sun (Australia)Leigh PaatschThough the movie has some problems finding a satisfactory ending, its refreshingly relaxed feel and a wonderful performance by Foulcher in a deceptively demanding role ensures it never outstays its welcome. |
| Concrete PlaygroundSarah WardSmart, funny and perceptive... brimming with well-observed scenarios, characters and emotions. |
| 3AWJim SchembriIt's starting to feel like the 1980s again, with too many Australian films looking and sounding like they needed more script development...This valiant attempt at a mainstream, feel-good comedy is the latest example. It's a lovely idea that falls flat. |