Lending laughter to (mid) life

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@tescouk Very delicious sausages indeed! Ellie bit.ly/15VUYdC

About 48 minutes ago from CountryWives's Twitter via bitly

Untouchable

Was booking the family tickets to see Skyfall yesterday – like the rest of the UK, we always go and see the new Bond films as soon as they come out – when I thought I would ask my son if he’d like to come and watch a film I have been desperate to see for weeks. I wasn’t sure he’d be up for sub-titles, but he was.  Untouchable has quickly been and gone on the major cinema chains’ schedules, even though it has won so many awards. But, thanks to Google, we tracked a showing down at a tiny little cinema in Chichester, where my son was at least forty years younger than any of the other audience.  This place has a charm all of its own – from the OAP at the bar serving glasses of wine (at 4.30pm in the afternoon) and scaldingly hot paper cups of tea, to the wonderful atmosphere of the small auditorium with its oak beams.

This huge box office hit  tells the story of the unlikely friendship between Philippe, a wealthy quadriplegic, and Driss, a young and poor man from the ghettos, who is hired as his live-in carer – despite its sober premis, it really is a very funny film and both son and I found ourselves roaring with laughter. Not everyone fell in love with the film though – when it was released in the UK in September this year, The Independent called it “a third rate buddy movie that hardly understands its own condescension” but I couldn’t disagree more with that review. Sure, it has the same unlikely theme as Driving Miss Daisy, but I loved that film too.  It made me laugh and it made me cry. Doesn’t get much better in my book!

Philippe Pozzo di Borgo with Abdel Sellou, the real life people who the film plot was based on.

Grace x

4 comments

  1. Great Film

  2. Yep! It’s a great film! Grace x

  3. A touching movie.

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About Grace

Grace
Marriage to a younger man has been the making of me – it helps that he is my soul mate (a hackneyed phrase but no other words will do) and that we have a (99.9%) wonderful 19 year old son. Two gentle dogs – my beloved Jack Russell and my husband’s occasionally whiffy black Labrador - complete our little family. We live in rural West Sussex and, a decade after leaving London, I now find it hard to believe that I ever adored city life. I love the tranquillity of the countryside, the fresh air, the extra space, the fact that people stop to chat. I spend my time making lists, pretending to do Pilates, being glued to an ironing or chopping board in my kitchen – and trying to find something more interesting to do than all of those things.