Rachel Sennott is “traumatized but funny as hell” in new I Used To Be Funny trailer

I Used To Be Funny is Ally Pankiw's feature-length directorial debut. She's previously helmed episodes of Black Mirror and The Great.

Film News I Used to Be Funny
Rachel Sennott is “traumatized but funny as hell” in new I Used To Be Funny trailer
I Used To Be Funny Screenshot: Utopia/YouTube

Even though the world is still recovering from her earth-shaking delivery of “your parents are upper middle class” in Bodies Bodies Bodies, Rachel Sennott is back with yet another sardonic but personally miserable protagonist in I Used To Be Funny, the feature-length debut from director Ally Pankiw.

While Sennott has infused all of her characters with her unique brand of unhinged humor, this one might hit closest to home. Like the actor, Sennott’s character, Sam, was once a stand-up comic just trying to make it in the scene. Sam, however, doesn’t have a lot to laugh about in her personal life. As she struggles with PTSD stemming from a sexual assault, Sam must also weigh whether or not to join the search for a missing teenager (Olga Petsa) she used to nanny. The film alternates between past and present, as Sam tries to get back onstage and reconcile with her trauma.

I Used to be Funny | Official Trailer | Utopia

While the film clearly won’t be a knee-slapper, the trailer isn’t lacking for fun, quippy bits. “I was an au pair for two years. I’m also a comedian. So I spend most of my time with overgrown children,” Sam deadpans at one point. “Brooke is the one person who doesn’t pity me. She hates me… which is refreshing,” she says about her missing nanny charge later on.

“I wanted to explore what the ups and downs of recovery from trauma actually look like,” Pankiw said of the film in a director’s statement (via Entertainment Weekly). “It’s less often a tale of revenge or vengeance or pure devastation, but rather a slow, lifelong repairing of the relationships that shape us and a reclaiming of our own comedic voices and joy. This film is ultimately about how far and deep the fractures of trauma can reach after even one act of violence.”

While Pankiw hasn’t directed a feature-length film before, she’s been a part of the scene for a while now. She directed season one of Mae Martin’s Netflix comedy, Feel Good, as well as episodes of Shrill, The Great, and Black Mirror (“Joan Is Awful”). To some, she may be better known as the visionary behind popular music videos like MUNA and Phoebe Bridgers’ “Silk Chiffon,” Cyn’s “Holy Roller,” and The Beaches’ “Snake Tongue.”

I Used To Be Funny premieres in New York theaters June 7, LA theaters June 14, and will be available on digital June 18.

5 Comments

  • adamtrevorjackson-av says:

    my friend ally made this movie and i saw it last fall. it’s very good! (she also put me in a music video once, which was very nice of her)

  • thebtskink2-av says:

    The director’s Black Mirror episode is one of my favorites in the entire series. I’m adding this movie into my watch list based on that alone.

  • bossk1-av says:

    What would happen if she met Kat Dennings.

  • frycookonvenus-av says:

    Scientific studies have shown that in the last five years, 90% of all new movies and shows are about “processing grief and trauma.”

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