Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0
Bernard Jordan
Irene Jordan
Arthur
Young Bernard
Young Irene
Scott
Adele
Tim
Nathan
Vicky
LCT Commander Parker
Heinrich
Young Tour Guide
Douglas Bennet
Maurice (Patron)
Little Old French Lady
Cyclist
Male TV Announcer
Sandy
Reporter
Self (Archive Footage)
Self (Archive Footage)
Self (Archive Footage)
Doctor Saunders
Cyclist
Edith
Judith Cook
Martin Roberts
A Candy Girl
A Candy Girl
A Candy Girl
Band Leader
Susan Everard
Police Sergeant
Police Officer Robert
Reporter
Factory Girl
Normandy Tourist (uncredited)
Journalist (uncredited)
Interviewer (uncredited)
Ferry Passenger (uncredited)
Dancer (uncredited)
Gendarme (uncredited)
Mouthy Paparazzi (uncredited)
Written by Geronimo1967 on 2023-10-08
This is one of those contemporary, really quite touching, dramas that we won't be able to make for too much longer. It centres around an elderly couple, who have been together for seventy years, and live a semi-independent life in a care home. During a routine chat with their nurses, "Rene" (Glenda Jackson) discovers that her husband "Bernie" (Sir Michael Caine) had wanted to go to the impending celebrations for the 70th anniversary of the D-Day landings, but that all the tickets had gone. She makes it pretty clear that if he wants to go, well then he ought to just go! Armed with a only a carrier bag and a few quid, he takes a ferry and heads off on a trip that is going to induce some fairly horrific memories of events in 1945 - which we sparingly see in flashback - but is also going to provide him with a degree of fulfilment and closure on issues that have dogged him ever since. Snag? Well he didn't actually tell anyone he was going, so the home are worried, the police are looking and the media soon get hold of his tale of determination and a degree of celebrity beckons. It's a very characterful story, this, with a gentle chemistry between Jackson and Caine, and also between Caine and his newfound travelling companion "Arthur" (a proud performance from John Standing) as they both have to face their demons past and present. There's plenty of humour - a decent soupçon of sarcasm; along with a spirit of optimism and reconciliation that works well, without drifting into cheesy sentiment, for ninety minutes. It reminded me of the equally poignant BBC drama "A Foreign Field" (1993) and is a good, at times thought-provoking watch.