Timmy does not even bother giving his old acting friends a proper invitation. He sends coordinates. That tiny bit of social awkwardness suits Surrender to It, a film where almost every relationship seems to have been paused mid-sentence years ago and restarted in the Welsh countryside without anyone checking what changed.
Writer-director Tim Bryn Smith gathers Dani, Evie, Chrissy, Hugo, and the rest of a former acting collective for a hiking weekend supposedly organized by Timmy. Then Ram Richards, also known as Tristan, arrives with Pryce in tow, carrying the aura of someone who actually escaped the group’s abandoned ambitions and turned performance into a career. Old resentments and unspoken attractions start moving before the hike does.
At roughly 83 minutes, the film tries character drama, comedy, woodland menace, fantasy, and folk horror. Its energy is rarely the problem. Finding room for the feelings underneath all that movement is harder.
Dani Carries the Weight
Daemian Greaves gives the film its emotional center as Dani, a father still living inside the death of his young son. Dani joins the trip partly to create distance from Celena and the shared grief sitting between them. Greaves plays that distance quietly. He lets pauses stretch, keeps Dani’s body heavy, and rarely reaches for the theatrical gestures surrounding him elsewhere in the ensemble.
That restraint matters when Timmy finally appears carrying his father’s ashes. The two men have turned loss into opposite behaviors. Dani withdraws from people who know exactly why he hurts. Timmy creates a treasure hunt from his father’s memory, converting mourning into an activity with coordinates, clues, and somewhere to walk next. The film never needs either man to explain the parallel in a speech. Their actions already do it.
Smith finds a warmer rhythm when the group simply spends time together. The skinny-dipping stop, loose conversations about their old acting days, and small changes in posture around Ram suggest friendships shaped by shared embarrassment and unfinished business. These scenes make the reunion feel lived in.
Then a toilet gag or exaggerated flirtation crashes through the mood. Comedy can sit beside grief, and often should, yet the cuts here arrive so quickly that Dani’s pain barely has time to settle before the film asks for a different emotional response. You feel the bruise. The film keeps poking somewhere else.
A Script That Refuses to Travel Light
Timmy’s treasure would be enough for one woodland comedy. Dani’s bereavement could carry a drama. Smith also adds Hugo’s concealed feelings, Evie’s romantic interest, Chrissy’s unseen admirer, Ram’s scandal, Pryce’s suspicious behavior, a strange figure named Jeff, three hostile locals, and a bridge legend involving the surrender of a soul.
The locals initially create useful anxiety. Their repeated appearances make the woods feel watched, and cutting away from the hikers gives the threat a second life outside the group’s awareness. Once they lace the food with magic mushrooms, though, their behavior becomes so juvenile that the menace evaporates. They look like a danger, act like bored troublemakers, and eventually matter less to the main story than all that stalking suggests.
The mushroom sequence is where the film’s restless design becomes impossible to ignore. Hallucinations, chases, comedy, and woodland panic collide, while a meditation scene suddenly expands into a stylized historical fantasy. It is a bold swing, and the image has greater visual confidence than much of the surrounding material. The problem is rhythm. Smith keeps switching tracks before one sequence can build momentum.
That same impatience reaches the performances. Timmy’s broader comic delivery can survive the film’s loose tone, but several exchanges sound recited rather than discovered between friends. The editing often cuts across gestures and reactions before actors can complete an emotional beat. Pandemic traces add another odd fracture: masks, elbow bumps, and lockdown references appear, then recede inconsistently from interactions with the same people.
By the final third, Ram and Pryce are carrying revelations that need to explain several earlier tensions at once. A late twist also softens consequences in a way that feels closer to an escape hatch than a payoff. The film has spent so long opening doors that it starts closing them with both hands.
Enthusiasm Can Fill a Set, Not a Script
Smith’s Nottingham Actors’ Workshop roots are visible in the film’s generosity toward its ensemble. Nearly everyone gets a quirk, a private hurt, a romantic possibility, or a plot thread. You can sense the production wanting to create space for emerging performers, and that impulse gives the film a scrappy warmth.
The ambition reaches the craft, too. Countryside locations become chase routes, a meditation session becomes a historical fantasy, and a simple reunion keeps changing genre around its cast. For a small production, there is real pleasure in seeing filmmakers try the difficult version instead of the safe one.
Yet the strongest material remains painfully simple. Dani sitting with loss. Timmy holding his father’s ashes. Old friends briefly behaving like people who remember who each other used to be. Greaves understands that emotion does not need another subplot to become interesting.
Surrender to It keeps reaching for another secret, another joke, another genre turn. I kept wishing it would stay still beside the people who already gave it something worth feeling.
The independent British dark comedy-drama Surrender to It held its local premiere at the Savoy Cinema in November 2025 before launching globally on digital platforms on March 30, 2026. Audiences can rent or purchase the film online via major digital storefronts, including Apple TV, Amazon Prime Video, and YouTube. The narrative centers on a grieving father who reunites with his old drama workshop friends for a remote weekend retreat in the Welsh countryside, only for their personal baggage and a series of strange occurrences to plunge the gathering into chaos.
Where to Watch Surrender to It (2026) Online
Full Credits
Title: Surrender to It
Distributor: Miracle Media, Apple TV, Amazon Prime Video
Release date: November 2025 (Savoy Cinema Premiere), March 30, 2026 (Global Digital Release)
Rating: 14A / PG-13
Running time: 83 minutes
Director: Tim Bryn Smith
Writers: Tim Bryn Smith
Producers and Executive Producers: Tim Bryn Smith, Nottingham Actor’s Workshop Production Team
Cast: Daemian Greaves, Melissa May Smith, Olivia Bailey, Clare Alexandra Isabelle McGill, Joe Kirton, Matthew Thomason, Chantelle Lee, Fletcher Graham, Alex Rose
Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Nottingham Actor’s Workshop Technical Crew
Editors: Tim Bryn Smith, Technical Team
Composer: Independent Music Collective
The Review
Surrender to It
Surrender to It is easiest to like when its old friends stop running through plot machinery and simply sit with each other. Dani's grief and Timmy's attachment to his father's ashes give the woodland reunion a real ache, helped by Daemian Greaves' restrained performance. Then hostile locals, mushrooms, hidden desires, suspicious schemes, and half-formed mysteries crowd the path. Tim Bryn Smith's ambition is obvious, and the DIY energy has charm, yet the film keeps interrupting its own strongest feelings.
PROS
- Daemian Greaves' restrained performance
- Dani and Timmy's grief parallels
- Genuine ensemble camaraderie
- Energetic DIY filmmaking
CONS
- Overloaded collection of subplots
- Severe tonal whiplash
- Uneven ensemble performances
- Mysteries with weak payoffs
- Choppy editing rhythm




















































