The film is comprised of four cells, echoing the layout of a Peanuts strip, linked by a voice-over delivered by a CGI bootleg of Charlie Brown.
The first screen features an isolated, melancholic Charlie Brown in various dramatic, romantic, stock footage landscapes. He narrates reflections on the nature of friendship, through references to philosophy, popular culture and first-hand observations. The second screen is a collage of clips from popular Hollywood films and music videos in which various forms of friendship are depicted. The third, which also provides the soundtrack, is a tour film of Holden’s band the Grubby Mitts on their Politics of Friendship Tour, the last tour the band undertook before the original line-up, friends since they were 12, finally called it a day. The fourth screen is a document of ‘The Beagle Room’, a friend’s bedroom which contains an epic collection of Peanuts toys and merchandise, collected over a lifetime and housed in her own private museum.
Also on show in Good Grief, Charlie Brown! is a series of painted bowls formed from melting old discarded 78rpm gramophone records of 1950s love songs. Onto these the artist has collaged images of Charlie Brown that he has hand-cut from Peanuts paperback books from the same period: sentimental and decorative, they explore the 1950s as a transitional point in the history of modernism, looking backwards and forwards simultaneously.