Showing posts with label Joanna lumley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joanna lumley. Show all posts

Sunday, September 15, 2019

Finding Your Feet

I'd missed this film at the cinema, but it was pretty good fun and went down well with the members: presumably a significant number are fans of Strictly Come Dancing.

Finding Your Feet

UK 2017          111 minutes

Director:          Richard Loncraine

Starring:            Imelda Staunton, Timothy Spall, Celia Imrie, David Hayman, John Sessions and Joanna Lumley


“This film could not court the grey pound more aggressively if it handed out free Saga holidays with every ticket. And yet, cynical as it undoubtedly is, there is a certain creaky charm to this tale of late-life second chances and senior dance classes. That charm is largely deployed by a game veteran cast. Headed up by Imelda Staunton as Sandra, the wife who discovers her husband’s infidelity just as she was hoping to enjoy their Ocado-delivered retirement, and Celia Imrie as Bif, her pot-smoking bohemian sister, the cast also includes Timothy Spall and a gloriously vampy Joanna Lumley. Spall and Staunton, in particular, are tremendous.”


Wendy Ide
Awards and Nominations

  • Won Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature at the Palm Springs International Film Festival

When Lady Sandra Abbott (Imelda Staunton) discovers that her husband (John Sessions) is having an affair she takes refuge with her bohemian sister Bif (Celia Imrie). Bif persuades her to join her dance class and here Charlie (Timothy Spall), Jackie (Joanna Lumley) and Ted (David Hayman) show her that her divorce might just give her a whole new lease of life and love.

Richard Loncraine studied at Art College before moving on to Film School and in his subsequent career he has worked extensively both in television and cinema. For the BBC his early work included Blade on the Feather (1980) and Brimstone and Treacle (1982), both by Dennis Potter and later on he directed the TV movies The Gathering Storm (2002), about the life of Winston Churchill (Albert Finney) in the years before the outbreak of war in 1939 and The Special Relationship (2010), from a screenplay by Peter Morgan, about the relationship between Tony Blair (Michael Sheen) and US Presidents Clinton and George W Bush.

For the cinema Loncraine’s films have been wide-ranging in style and include the period comedy-drama The Missionary (1982) which was written by and starred Michael Palin in his first post-Python film, Richard III (1995) a filmed adaptation of Richard Eyre’s National Theatre production set in the 1930s with Ian McKellen in the title role, and Wimbledon (2004), a romantic comedy set during the annual tennis tournament.

Here's a link to the trailer: