Last Train to Christmas (2021) Poster

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7/10
Bulwell, well, well .... !
southdavid29 December 2021
People don't recommend movies to me very often; I think they assume that I've probably seen everything already. One of my friends though asked me to watch "Last Train to Christmas" as he'd seen it, and he wasn't sure what to think of it. I agreed, assuming that, as it's bundled with a lot of other Sky produced releases this festive period, that it would be light Christmas froth. It certainly wasn't that.

In 1985, Nottingham based empresario Tony Towers (Michael Sheen) boards a train home from London, with his fiancé Sue (Nathalie Emmanuel), brother Roger (Cary Elwes) and his wife Paula (Katherine Kelly). The brother's relationship is strained as Tony plans to a risky strategy of opening a number of clubs across the East Midlands. As Tony looks for the buffet section, he walks to the next carriage and inexplicably finds himself in 1995. In shabby clothes, he comes to learn that the clubs have failed, and he is near destitute. Tony discovers that each carriage on the train is a different decade in his life and he can change aspects in his own past. Despite the best of intentions though, the changes often have unforeseen consequences.

Again, I came to this one expecting light Christmas comedy, akin perhaps to something like the "Nativity" films. The opening scenes tend to support that idea too. Sheen is sporting a comedy mullet, his sparring with his brother and sister-in-law is fun, though with a little edge to it. The longer the films runs though, the darker the storyline gets, as family secrets are exposed, characters come and go from the story and none of Tony's changes turn out as planned. I see from some of the other reviews, that people struggled to follow the storyline. I can't say that was a problem for me, but I was surprised as it kept expanding and we saw further and further back into Tony's life.

Sheen is brilliant in everything, and there's a capable cast surrounding him. Some characters get more screen time than others, but Cary Elwes is excellent too. I live in the East Midlands. I think it's a really hard accent to nail without drifting too far North and becoming Yorkshire and I think, though not perhaps note perfect, both actors do a good job of landing it. There are aspects of the recreations that I liked, particularly when it comes to the train itself and despite not being a real comedy, there are regular funny moments.

Why not a higher score then? It too has been said in other reviews, but it's the ending for me. I don't need every film I see wrapped up in a nice little Christmas bow, but I felt the journey that Tony went on warranted a less ambiguous happy ending than the one we got. (I do have a specific one in mind, but I want to keep the review spoiler free).

That issue aside, I felt that "Last Train to Christmas" was an interesting and moving film that I wasn't expecting at all and am still thinking about days later.
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5/10
Last Train to Christmas
Prismark1021 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Last Train to Christmas is a hybrid of A Christmas Carol and It's a Wonderful Life with a touch of Groundhog Day.

The train journey starts with Tony Towers (Michael Sheen) a Peter Stringfellow lite nightclub impresario in 1985 with his fiancé Sue (Nathalie Emmanuel.)

They are to meet his brother Roger (Cary Elwes) and his wife. Roger was in business with Tony but has since departed to work in the music electronics spinoff for Dixons.

Tony discovers that as he goes up and down the train carriage. He can move forwards and backwards in time and see how his life unfolds.

He sees a vision when his aggressive expansion of his nightclub empire collapses in ruins. When he makes Roger an equal partner, he later sees a future when he is betrayed by Roger.

The more Tony tries to manipulate his future the more problems he creates. Eventually Tony realises that he needs to resolve some deep rooted issues with his brother Roger.

The high concept film does not entirely succeed. It was billed as a comedy drama but it gets dark rather too quickly. The different timelines can gets confusing as it flips various decades.

Soon the nostalgia factor goes out of the window and you realise it needed more humour and frivolity.

At least the film looks at the fleeting nature of celebrity. Tony goes from nightclub owner to a rock singer, radio presenter to a television host. It always brings accompanying problems.

Both Sheen and Elwes enjoy themselves and for the first time, Elwes does a non posh English accent. He really does let his hair down.
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5/10
"Take the last train to Christmas and I'll meet you at the station!"
adamjohns-4257524 December 2021
This isn't the upbeat fun Christmas film I was expecting, in fact, I'm not sure that it even needed to be set at Christmas. Perhaps they were trying something new, as I'm always hoping they will with seasonal films, but it didn't have enough Christmas going on for my tastes and the time travel and cause and effects that occurred were never really explained. Was it magic, technology or was it some form of dementia, as Mr Sheen looked back over his years?

Michael is his usual brilliant self, as he gives a great performance in the lead role and the supporting cast are all very good too, Cary Elwes was completely unrecognisable.

'Game Of Thrones'' Missandei has come a long way from 'Hollyoaks' too, she's actually a very good actress now and does well in her role.

I personally loved the nostalgic touches. It was great to see an old Woolworths carrier bag, Hooch Lemonade and Now albums that took me back. I could also recognise elements of my parents past too, but I'm not sure that everybody would understand the references, people don't seem to look back very much anymore. There's a lot of "How am I supposed to know? It was before I was born!" I hope that I am wrong and people can enjoy these thoughtful touches.

I did find that the chronology was a bit confusing, as you don't know which year he has gone back or forward to, because he's always changed something and there's no obvious explanation as to what was happening to him next or what effect he had made straight away. I also found the ending confusing? How does he fill in the gaps having reached the destination?

Overall, it wasn't really my thing, a bit too gritty and real for me, but I can see that it's been thought about, even down to the different film or filters used to match the various eras. I would have just liked a bit more clarity.

519.71/1000.
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Lost time....
duncan8820 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Liked this but the end ruined it. It starts in the 80s and moves nicely through time. However, at the end he is in the current day and therefore loses 40 odd years of the optimal time line. Should have ended when it began. Seems a harsh trade off lol.
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6/10
Back in time for Christmas
murada196720 December 2021
Some wonderful acting and period details overshadowed by the multiple timelines which do, on occasion, become a bit confusing. I really enjoyed the first hour or so then felt the film lost its way with confusing jumps over a 50 year period. I thought the ending was ok though I can understand why many would find it frustrating.
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7/10
It's a wonderful Christmas train life
peterrichboy19 December 2021
There is no doubt, there are elements of some classic Christmas films used in last train to Christmas. Whether it be a Christmas Carol, It's a wonderful life and a touch of sliding doors thrown in. First and foremost this is Michael Sheen's film. He is in every scene playing same person at various stages of his life had things turned out different between himself and his brother/nephew.

There is plenty to enjoy here with some enjoyable cameo appearances from the likes of Hayley Mills, John Thompson and Phyllis Logan. The only disappointment which stops me from giving it a higher mark, was the confusing ending. 7/10.
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7/10
Time travel, destiny and love
CrazyArty25 December 2021
Time travelling drama set on a train. A successful nightclub owner boards a train with his wife and brother. He discovers that as he moves forward along the train, he also moves forward in time.

Stars Michael Sheen and Carey Elwes.

A low budget film, seems more appropriate for TV. The plot is like an extended episode of the Twilight Zone. I think Michael Sheen should probably be above such things now but it's an interesting movie concept about time travel, love and destiny.
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3/10
Unfortunately a train crash
xpeebiex26 December 2021
Starts well and the cinematography is excellent as the decades change but the story is weak and it just loses its way. Michael Sheen's acting is the saving grace as he delivers a great performance.
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10/10
A bit of a different Christmas film
saratonkinson18 December 2021
Didn't know what to expect with this, I just saw the picture with the dreadful mullet but I love Michael Sheen. I wasn't disappointed. It was a different idea but really good. It's not an overly Christmassy film but it's got the essence of what Christmas is about, love and family. Michael Sheen is brilliant as always.
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7/10
Loved it, until......
kris-gray19 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The ending.

I love alternate history, time travel films like this. It got a bit confusing with so many different time lines but I managed to keep up. Nice cameos from Penelope Wilton, John Thompson and fab to see that Confessions star Robin Asquith.

However it was wonderful right up to the last minute when he gets off the train to meet, well who did he meet? I'm sorry but I found that just a bit too frustrating. Was it Roger? Was it Sue? Was it Father Christmas? Grrrrr so 10 Stars for everything else, 3 stars off for the ending.

I'd still watch it again though, Michael Sheen is fab.
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4/10
Started Interestingly Ended Badly
phil-8373727 December 2021
Having just watched this I'm left a bit annoyed. The film starts out well enough and it has some good moments, but the ending is terrible and it makes no sense.

This is a shame because overall I thought this was ok.
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8/10
Much better than expected!
csm-7811924 December 2021
I watched this primarily as it was a Michael Sheen film and it promised some nostalgia. As always Sheen was excellent but the whole piece was very well done with a strong supporting performance from Cary Elwes. Nathalie Emmanuel also shone. The film was well crafted and despite its fantastical storyline it held together remarkably well. There was a great attention to detail and the cinematography and use of light in particular was such that I was convinced at one point that we were back in the 1980's. Overall it was well worth a viewing with entertaining and touching moments and a good heart and soul at its centre. Nice to see a Simon Aldred song get an outing at the end as well.
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6/10
It's a wonderful idea until the stupid ending
tonyspencer-1315821 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Tony Towers is a successful night club owner in Nottingham by the time he is 45, at Christmas 1985. He is about to open 6 new night clubs. But the night life as a showman and impresario has taken its toll; he has lost his first wife through his lifestyle and is totally estranged from his son. Now his second wife-to-be, nervous returning with him to meet his family at Christmas, knowing that they may regard her as far too young for him and a gold digger. Tony's younger sensible businessman brother Roger, once his partner, advises Tony that he is making a mistake expanding too fast. Full of the life of the party, Tony wants to buy champagne for all the passengers in his carriage and moves forward towards the buffet car.

Then, the Christmas fantasy of Christmas Carol, It's a Wonderful Life, and Groundhog Day, kicks in. When he moves towards the front of the train, time for him advances 10 years into the future to 1995 and he finds out that life has not turned out as he'd hoped. In 1995 he's lost all his clubs and his second wife and is now a drunken bum. Throughout the carriages, a theme which keeps popping up is a one off single 45 of a song the pair sing in a record booth for the price of a single record, the sleeve hand-written with cartoon images of Tony and Roger, the two Towers brothers.

When he he returns to the 1985 he realises that he has seen the future and can change that ruined future by including his brother in his plans and toning down his own lifestyle. Going forward to 1995 again, the future is even bleaker, although Tony changes his own life, his brother Roger inherits the lifestyle Tony has avoided. Going back down the train, he goes back and forth between 70s and 90s, to the 60s and 50s he finds the changes he makes each in hopes of improving his and Roger's outcomes, but it all becomes more and more of a disaster, more for his brother Roger than for him, but now he is concerned more for Roger than himself. He is bewildered and has no memories between the decades, at one point he has a second child, a young daughter in her 20s and in what must be 2015 he also has a grandson in his late teens.

****SPOILERS****** He goes back as far as he can go, the 1940s, and discovers what he has suspected, that his brother is actually his cousin a wartime pregnancy for a very young girl, so he decides to jump from the train and stop his aunt giving up her son, and hopes this will change the self-destruction of Roger. It works, the aunt accepts that she can cope with being a single parent with her sister's support. Tony hurts his leg in the fall and a WWII soldier puts him back on the old steam train.

Tony stands up, at it is the "present day", presumably 2020 (or 2025, as the sequences have been in decades), so now he is an old man in his 70s/80s. He walks with a limp, he's alone on the train, with the 45rpm self-made single now has only Tony on it (and we know he can't sing or play an instrument) and Roger would bear Tony's mother's surname and wouldn't be a Tower. He has a single faded polaroid photo of his (late?) wife in his wallet. He gets off the train as it arrives in Nottingham, the terminus of this "Last Train", where it is the present day, i.e, somewhen in the 2020s, but definitely not 1985 when the train journey started. All the relatives meeting the passengers on the platform depart, leaving Tony as the only one left, last off the train and alone on the platform, no luggage, no Christmas gifts, no-one to welcome him home and he's clearly not expecting to be met. Then, we see a piano left on the platform (do provincial stations even have them?) and a single hand plays a short melodic refrain on the top notes of the keyboard. Tony turns and smiles, presumably at his brother (the hand has a ring on one finger but cannot recall if the brother (or grandson) had a ring) and that is the end of the movie.

What?!

What happened to the happy ending? What happened to those 40 years between 1985 when the train set off and now? Did Tony get on the train in the 2020s, fall asleep and dream of what his life might have been like in 1985? Clearly, his life between 1945 and 1985, when he started this journey, must have turned out completely differently having jumped off the train, but did he re-experience those new years? By the way he limped to an empty seat and examined the record and his wallet and found the photo, it is clear that his life from 1945 to now was different, and that the 1985 train ride could never have happened.

So I am completely confused, if none of that 80 years happened, what was the point of the film? What was the lesson he learned in the last 35/40 years? Does he even recall what happened in the last 80 years? Is family meeting him? Or is he just going home to his lonely room in the old folks' home after a day out on his own?

The acting by Mr Sheen was sublime, the make-up and set dressing for the different decades was excellent, the concept of the film for 95% of it was intriguing. This could have been a brilliant film, if I could understand that in comprehensive ending. But with the other 3 classics I mentioned, they all end up at the exact time they started, with lessons learned and everything now right with the world. This ending, jumping from a 1985 reality to the present day reality with a lot of fantasy in between was a disaster. Did I miss something? What were they thinking? The ending made the whole thing from 1945 to now completely unknown, did he have a happy life, did he have a family? What kind of life had he led and what was he left with in the present time? If it was Cousin Roger playing the ivories, who was rather tardy in collecting his semi-crippled cuz from the train, maybe his life was full and fulfilling and didn't flash almost unexperienced before his eyes in 90 minutes that Tony's life appeared to have done. 5/10 for effort, nil points for the stupid ending.
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3/10
Swing and a miss for a black mirror style
GpCapt_Lionel_Mandrake21 December 2021
Sky have a had a run of good self made movies of late but this wasn't one.

In fairness the acting was the redeeming feature, they were all pretty spot on, as you'd expect from such a talented cast.

This isn't really a Christmas movie, apart from people occasionally bringing up its Christmas which feels forced for the dialog, or bits of Christmas music the plot could be any time of year(s)

Felt like trying to go for some sort of feature length black mirror vibe with some sliding doors thrown in, and it just didn't land for me.

The plot line starts off with a good concept but loses itself further it goes on, and the last 20 minutes are odd and kill the let bit of interest I had. I didn't really laugh at any point and had no feelings about any of the characters of their arch (if you could say they had one). The end just left me feeling like I'd wasted 2 hours of my life and filed under won't watch again.
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7/10
All the reviews about the ending:
Tabb8922 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Anyone who has left a review to mention about the ending being in the future needs to realise that his selfless good deeds were enough for him to warrant the years lost in time. I thought that was brilliant. Bravo.
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7/10
Really good
Apalerwuss7 January 2022
This was much better than I thought it was going to be, based on the other reviews I read here.

Like all time travel movies, there are flaws, but it was a good story about fate and destiny, one that was very well acted. Not Oscar material, sure, but worth 110 minutes of your life.
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7/10
Sliding Doors meets Groundhog Day meets It's A Wonderful Life
joachimokeefe21 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
In 1985, a pretty obnoxious club owner (based on Peter Stringfellow) on a train to Nottingham discovers that moving between train carriages takes him forwards and backwards into potential universes, based on his actions in the past. A lot of nostalgic product callbacks.

Martin Sheen nails it of course, the supporting cast do too. Spot the changing railway livery (which 'Dunkirk' utterly failed on btw). The final black-and-white scenes are an obvious homage to Xmas redemption movies immemorial, and it works - thought the ending is a bit too tantalizing, you have to imagine for yourself who the person meeting him at his destination is and no more. For that, it bears repeat viewing, I guess.

My problem with LTTX is the way that it is completely (well, 99%) based within train carriages, which gets a bit claustrophobic - well, limiting. Even Murder On The Orient Express took a break.

A re-watchable Xmas movie, none the less.
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5/10
He killed off his daughter, grandson and son?
mwareham-1312524 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The film is watcheable and i loved Michael Sheen, the characters and novel story. But it raises more questions than answers which left me unsatisfied and i'm not sure this ended up better for everyone other than his cousin, as we assume that's him on the piano at the end and why Tony is so happy. However, in changing time he appears to have denied his daughter a life and hence stopped his grandson existing and in a different timeline he appears to have denied his son an existence, which really doesnt seem to bother him. None of these offspring appear to gave that lousy a life that they deserved being bumped off by Tony to save his cousin who, frankly, made his own choices. Its really rather troubling that Tony appears to be more concerned about his cousin than his own children and in fact he seems to show them no love or understanding. Its really rather a shame that the story appears to have glossed over these facts. The only 'kind' thing Tony does is he seems to say to two future wives that they are better off without him, which may be true, but he gives no thought to his own offspring. Its a bit of a plot gap to be honest.

There are other strange things in the story, like why it seems that Tony's history being changed has caused Michael Portillo to become Prime Minister. Humourous side joke, but makes one wonder about how that happened.

I also didnt quite understand how Tony jumping out the train suddenly changed his aunt's decision not to pass on her son not to happen. That didnt quite ring true.

I also find it a little troubling that the story is based on a premise that Roger's life was ruined by finding out he was adopted, when in fact it would appear that Tony's parents werent bad people such that it caused such an emotional catastrophe.

The film is watcheable and interesting, but its also rather frustrating as it doesnt explain itself as a moral tale, other than suggesting that mothers screw up children by getting them adopted, which isnt actually a comfortable message for me. It doesnt really explain why this is all happening or why, in some people having been denied an existence in favour of Roger getting a better life is necessarily a happy ending.
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8/10
Rod Serling meets Charles Dickens
tim-78322 December 2021
"Last Train to Christmas" is not a conventional Christmas movie. It's more like Scrooge meets the Twilight Zone. It forces its central character (Sheen) to confront the consequences of his life choices with a level of horror not seen since Alastair Sim threw himself, prostrate, on his own grave, in 1951's "Christmas Carol," begging death for another chance.

In addition to Sheen's great performance the movie tours us through several decades of hair, fashion, hand held electronics and the decor of British Rail.
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6/10
A good story in search of a decent script
jamesdeberesford-122 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
As I review Last Train to Christmas it's rated at 6.1 stars and that seems about right. An engaging concept that blends Sliding Doors, Back to the Future and Groundhog Day with a bit of Russian Doll is nonetheless let down by a frustratingly poor script, characterisation and direction.

Just as you can tell bad writing in the first paragraph of a novel or short story the first scene sets the tone. In strolls Tony Towers offering Champers to the carriage and it's all a bit of a mess from the way a surely curious boy in the foreground suddenly disappears, to the way the passengers turn round in sync and say yes far too quickly (where is the English reserve, is he talking to me?, not wishing to seem greedy etc) to the way Tony hands flowers to someone sat down and asks her to put them on the shelf when he is much nearer. I'm not saying that people don't take the piss but it just doesn't ring true. A more likely self-entitlement scenario is Tony handing the bouquet to someone who is stood nearer the shelf than him and being a shade less polite than strangers normally are. "Put that on the shelf, will you, ta," and turning away as if it's a given.

This sloppiness continues through out. One time Tony walks past his aunt. She conveniently looks up from her magazine on cue and only seeing him from behind immediately says, "Anthony." Not impossible, but nudging the implausible. In real life, we get up and say, "I thought it was you," once we've checked discreetly.

And what about when he first walks into a carriage? Notwithstanding that he doesn't notice he's dressed differently, the change in the carriage and surely feels a decade worse for wear when he finally sees his completely altered appearance reflected in the window his response is simply not commensurate with the shock, which he gets over very quickly.

Speaking of which, Michael Sheen never convinces as a nightclub owner. His accent wavers all over the place without ever seeming to alight in Nottingham and if he's a Nottingham nightclub owner I'm a Brussel sprout. He comes across as a middle-class luvvie with a scarily poor veneer of working class man on the make.

What keeps Last Train going is that in spite of it being so badly done in so many ways is it's actually a rather good story and a good production. I eagerly looked forward to each scene change to see how Tony had changed and a couple of the ideas in particular were quite cute. A Mike Read style DJ doing an ATP advert fit the bill nicely. As did the funeral goers and the morbid change in his aunt.

And when Tony decides to do the right thing and gently let the young woman he loves down, knowing what is best for her the story reaches its most mature moment.

As for flirting with his daughter, that may be a nod to Back to the Future but it is a welcome homage.

Ultimately, Last Train is a Christmas turkey but it hints so well at something so much better it deserves to be made again. Could Hollywood sort this mess out?
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5/10
A bit confusing and too long.
deloudelouvain27 December 2021
I can't say I was impressed by Last Train To Christmas. It started rather promising, a bit intriguing, but in the end it was just too confusing at times. Too much going back and forth, which wasn't good for the story. The acting was okay though and that from almost everyone. The duration of the movie was also a bit too long, it felt a bit boring towards the end. I guess as a tv-movie it would be okay, but it's just not my kind of soup.
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9/10
Shame about the ending.
neillaoshi27 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Some people have complained that the film was confusing, but I suspect the fact that it's not simplistic and you have to use your a brain a bit is what many of the rest of us liked about it.

It was fantastic to see all the different time periods, and the trains they were in: yes, that's limiting, and you have to accept that quite a few critical moments in their lives just happened to take place on a train, but if you're willing to accept that bit of poetic license you'll probably really enjoy the movie.

The only thing that annoyed me was the ending: other people seemed to wondering who he was meeting (I assume it was his brother, because that was the big final redemption and we'd already seen he was with his girl), but he'd just lost forty years of his life! He needed to go back to 1985 when the movie started and have everything OK back then, otherwise it doesn't make sense.
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If it wasn't a Christmas film
Gordon-1121 February 2022
"Last Train to Christmas" has an interesting concept, but it is far too sad and grim to be a Christmas film. It focuses on past regrets and mistaken decisions. The further the plot goes, the sadder it becomes. If it wasn't a Christmas film, it would have worked.
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7/10
Quite enjoyable mix of 90s kitsh and Great expectations on a Train
petemcphee23 January 2022
Having actually lived through the 90s this show took me back.

Spot on in every detail except one.

In 1995 the chances of seeing two fat girls on a train were virtually zero.

Back in 1995 most people were a healthy weight and within healthy BMI.

Seeing fat people was actually quite rate and they stood out.

Since 1996 the child hood obesity of 3.4 %has risen to over 22% If anyone watches old TV show The Professionals you will see how 28 inch waists on men were the norm in the 70s.
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3/10
Oh Michael, you know we love you....
mapine21 December 2021
I adore Michael Sheen! I would pay to watch him stand still for 2 hours so watching this was extremely disappointing. I'm not even sure where to start! First the story idea was marvelous, the actors were tip top and so were the costumes. I would even say the director had vision and understood the assignment but the story just couldn't hit the mark. Every time I thought "yes, this is it!", I was left hanging in complete disappointment. Michael was Michael and was pure perfection...we expect nothing less, so he gets a 10/10, I'm rating the story which was a dud. I actually burst out laughing at the end as it gave me exactly what it had promised all along... no satisfaction.
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