Review: Mrs. McCutcheon – A Radiant Short About Identity, Friendship, and Daring to Dance
By David McFarlane
Now and then, a short film comes along that says more in 16 minutes than some features manage in two hours. Mrs. McCutcheon, directed by John Sheedy and co-written with Ben Young, is one such gem — a heartfelt, unapologetic embrace of childhood difference, gender identity, and the bravery it takes to simply be yourself in a world that prefers conformity.
…Hey
This here, is my skin
This here is your skin
You got to be proud of that…
At the heart of the film is Tom — or rather, Mrs. McCutcheon — a 10-year-old child who knows, without hesitation, that the name assigned at birth does not reflect who they truly are. In a world that struggles to handle nuance, Mrs. McCutcheon strides forward in floral dresses and honesty, yearning not for attention but for belonging. Alec Golinger’s performance is luminous — tender without being twee, assured without being overly precocious. It’s the kind of portrayal that feels rare: childlike, but deeply wise.
Navigating a new school for the third time, Mrs. McCutcheon is predictably met with the usual cocktail of curiosity, ridicule, and cruelty. But amid the storm stands Trevor, played beautifully by Wesley Patten — a boy who understands what it means to be on the outside. As an Aboriginal child in a predominantly white school, Trevor’s marginalisation quietly mirrors Mrs. McCutcheon’s. Their friendship is the film’s heartbeat: subtle, sturdy, and transformative.
What Mrs. McCutcheon captures so well is the dual truth of childhood — that it can be both wildly cruel and deeply compassionate. The school dance, that almost-mythic rite of passage, becomes a stage for something far greater than a night of awkward swaying and bad punch. Without spoiling the moment, let’s just say the ending is bold, liberating, and quietly revolutionary. It left me teary-eyed and hopeful.
Technically, the film is a joy. Its cinematography bathes the story in warmth and colour, refusing to dull its vibrancy for the sake of “grit.” There’s humour, too — gentle, clever, and never at the expense of its characters. Sheedy and Young never preach, but they do remind us that courage isn’t always loud. Sometimes, it’s wearing a dress to a school dance and daring the world not to look away.

Mrs. McCutcheon is not just a celebration of gender diversity and youthful resilience — it’s a reminder that our differences are not flaws to overcome but truths to be honoured. And in today’s climate, where LGBTQ+ youth still face so many barriers, stories like this aren’t just important. They’re essential.
This award-winning short, lauded across festivals from Melbourne to São Paulo, deserves to be seen, shared, and remembered — not only for what it says, but for how beautifully it says it.
Director
John Sheedy
Writers
Ben Young
John Sheedy
Stars
Alec Golinger
Wesley Patten
Nadine Garner
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