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The Repair Shop (2017– )
10/10
Wonderful Show
5 January 2020
My wife and I recently found this show on Netflix. We really love it. We love the interaction of the different restorers, and especially like Jay, Steve, Kirsten and Will. We love how they try to ensure that different objects are restored, showing the expertise of each Restorer. We love the "reveal' as each object is returned to the owner. Several times tears have been shed as the owners get back their item in first-class restored condition. What a great program. Wish something like this was on in the US, but thankful we can now watch as many programs at a time as we like. Thanks for a great idea and expert craftsmen/restorers to do the job right. I think the Weald and Downland Museum would be a great place to visit.
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Quartet (2012)
5/10
An "Almost" Film ...
22 August 2013
I really wanted to like this film. I liked the story idea. I like the fact that it was a film about older folks and not your "run of the mill" movie aimed at the younger crowd. I wanted to be able to cheer for the characters. But I couldn't. For one thing, the language caught me by surprise. Using the "F" bomb several times. Also, Billy Connoly's character is a little "over the top" as far as his (Spoiler) hitting up on the women. I enjoyed listening to the music, and like what they did at the end in identifying the real musicians. However, the story just seemed to lack something. It actually left me feeling more sad than happy. I understand Hoffman's desire to show us that as long as there is life, you should Live, but it also is a realization that too many are only living on Nostalgia. (Spoiler) Courtney's scene with the students was wonderful. You want to think that this is what can happen - that one generation can pass on that love of music and understanding to the next, that the old and the young can connect. I would have liked for the film to have focused more on Courtney's character and not Connoly's. And then, the thought that these folks, after all their years of living, have to perform one more time just to save their place of living, well, that's a little bit of a downer. You think you can retire, but find out you can't really. I would love to have had the film continue. What happens next? What do they do to get along until the next Gala? It seemed to stop short for me. Just not the film I had hoped it would be. Strange, the last two films I have seen with Maggie Smith have to deal with the end stages of life and where one is going to live? I hope she can pick something better next time, something more uplifting.
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Dean Spanley (2008)
9/10
Engaging and thoroughly enjoyable
5 August 2013
What at first I thought would be a "light comedy" turned into an engaging and enjoyable film. The theme of "companionship" seems to resonate throughout the film. Seen through the eyes of Fisk the younger (Jeremy Northam)we are taken on a journey of understanding: what causes a person to emotionally "shut-down"? Fisk the younger's conversations with his father (Peter O'Toole) are emotionally strained and at best, simply "dutiful". As the only surviving family member, he visits his father each Thursday to fulfill his role as loving son. The father - "Fisk senior" - is crotchety, opinionated and without even enough love to call his son by his first name - Henslowe. Instead, he refers to his son as a headmaster would refer to a student: Fisk junior. (Made me think of O'Toole in "Goodbye Mr. Chips"!)But Henslowe is looking for a way to breakthrough with his relationship with his father and is given the chance by meeting Dean Spanley (Sam Neill) when Henslowe, his father, and Spanley all attend a discussion on "The Transmigration of Souls". There begins a regular meeting between Spanley and Henslowe - helped along by Henslowe agreeing to provide a drink called "Tokay" to Spanley, in exchange for Spanley relating his views on Re-incarnation. What follows is not what you think, but allows Henslowe to possibly understand why his father acts as he does. Without going into more detail and possibly spoiling it, I found this film to be superb in its acting. Northam is the anti-thesis of his father. O'Toole is stern and unloving, yet you still sense he misses those who have died. Northam is loving, yet not "whimpy" - he has a backbone. You sense at one point that the relationship is going to explode, but it doesn't. Neill is wonderful as the slightly eccentric Spanley. Brian Brown adds the touch of whimsy as the "soldier of fortune", who provides Henslowe with his needed "Tokay". I am always amazed to find these films and wonder why I never heard of them before. It is a wonderful study in human emotion and the longing for companionship - whether in dogs or humans. And, it is a triumph when we breakthrough and understand another persons pain and help them overcome. There is so much going on in this film: the study of how each one deals with loss. How we each deal with grief. The theme of companionship seen by the viewing of pictures or "Wrather" in his two-seater. The conversations of Spanley as "wags". All explore the theme of companionship which is the most basic of longings that we all have. I only gave it a 9 instead of 10, simply because I found the first half hour to be rather slow-moving. That may just be my own impression. The best part of the film is certainly the last 45 minutes. It was one of those films that when it ended, you wished it hadn't!
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