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When Did You Last See Your Father?
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Adapted from poet Blake Morrison's best-selling memoir by screenwriter David Nicholls and directed for the screen by Anand Tucker, And When Did You Last See Your Father? explores -- like its source material -- the complex, manifold emotional layers of a father-and-son relationship as it shifts and evolves over the passing decades. At the film's center is Blake Morrison himself, who for as long as he can remember has lived in the overarching shadow of his physician father, Arthur (Jim Broadbent) -- falling prey to feelings of embarrassment from the old man, as well as occasional awe. In the 1950s, when Blake (Bradley Johnson) was a child, the boy watched as Arthur partook in socially uncouth behavior such as wheedling his way into clubs to which he didn't belong, and carrying on an extramarital affair with the full knowledge of his wife, Kim (Juliet Stevenson). As the years passed, teenage Blake's (Matthew Beard) discomfort around his father hardened into resentment -- particularly when the adolescent boy expressed interest in a girl, Rachel (Carey Mulligan), who clearly preferred his father; compounding the situation, Blake then had to suffer through Arthur's decision to publicly humiliate his son in front of everyone. The central dynamic has changed for the two, however, by the late '80s, when Blake -- now married to Kathy (Gina McKee) and freshly established as a successful novelist and poet -- learns that Arthur has contracted terminal cancer. Now, the junior Morrison takes a headfirst plunge into the memories and recollections of his youth -- and grapples with the dynamic of his relationship with Arthur for the first time in his life as he comes face to face with the need to provide loving care for the old man. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
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tadivtadiv A quick summary of what I saw a ...
by tadiv in Telluride Film Festival 2008
"We saw the following films at the 2007 Telluride Film Festival...Features: The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, The Band’s Visit, [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
In his previous film, Shopgirl, director Anand Tucker found gloominess in nearly every interaction between Steve Martin and Claire Danes, resulting in a tone that ranged from melancholy to downright lugubrious. The gravitas is still there in When Did You Last See Your Father?, but it feels germane to the material this time, both more organic and better earned. In the hands of Tucker and the two stars, Colin Firth and Jim Broadbent, poet Blake Morrison's memoirs take on a powerful universality. It's not the details of the complicated relationship between father and son that will resonate most with viewers, since those are particular to Morrison. Rather, it's Morrison's ability to identify the generational fractures that can prevent any parent and child from saying what they mean to say, in the earthly time available to say it. As the title suggests, this film is about the attempt to see family members as humans, and toward that end, Firth's Blake reexamines a dozen formative experiences that hardened him against his father, which he's now trying to view in a different light. Not only is he not totally succeeding in that mission, but he's also losing the chance to have a cathartic moment with his weakened parent, who's bedridden, and operating at a diminished capacity. This is undoubtedly the right choice by screenwriter David Nicholls, who recognizes that people are often shortchanged on that front, and the best they can do is reach acceptable resolutions within themselves. But the film also contains flashbacks to more recent times, when we learn, from a simple twinkling of Broadbent's eye, that there's not only peace between them, but love. Tucker has made a film both of great sentiment and great restraint, and this balance leaves us feeling the opposite of emotionally manipulated. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 

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