In the week Prime Minister Theresa May officially signalled the UK's intention to leave the European Union, there is no better time for a play which throws the metropolitan elite together with the JAMs making ends meet in the regions.

A thoroughly contemporary play, Invincible sees a middle class couple relocate to a Northern town as they seek to make the best of the recession. But when they invite their down-to-earth neighbours round for an introductory drink, Oliver and Emily realise their entrenched views about art, capitalism and illegal wars are not much welcomed in their new hood.

But, while on the surface this may seem like a clash of cultures, as the play rolls on, the similarities between both couples begun to emerge. There are genuine laugh out loud moments, mainly generated by the excellent Graeme Brooks, who played the beer-guzzling, cat-loving postie Alan with aplomb.

But on the whole this is a play that seems to try to hard, with the stereotypes ramped up so much that they go beyond even parody. On the whole, the Original Theatre Company - which does an excellent job of taking theatre to the masses - added their own twists to Torben Betts' 2014 script.

And while the cliche jokes about olives and redistribution of wealth went down well with this oh so very Brighton audience, rather than taking the audience on a rollercoaster of emotions, it jitters along towards a rather tragic but unfulfilling conclusion. Mrs May will certainly be hoping to follow a very different script.