BEFORE: Well, I was going to record "Das Boot" but then of course I went downstairs to record it on the DVR, and I promptly forgot. So I'll have to catch it next time around - I'm a little more focused right now on scanning through some documentaries so that when it comes time to put that chain together, I'll know exactly what order to put all the films in. I guess my brain can only handle one thing at a time these days. Celia Imrie carries over from "Love Again".
Here's the line-up for Day 12 of TCM's "31 Days of Oscar", and we'll be at the halfway point very soon - the themes for tomorrow, Tuesday 2/24 are "Oscar Goes Down in History" and "Oscar Goes Back for More (Remakes)":
5:00 am "Disraeli" (1929)
6:30 am "Viva Villa!" (1934)
8:30 am "Rasputin and the Empress" (1932)
10:45 am "The Private Life of Henry VIII" (1933)
12:30 pm "Marie Antoinette" (1938)
12:30 pm "Marie Antoinette" (1938)
3:15 pm "Julius Caesar" (1953)
5:30 pm "Sunrise at Campobello" (1960)
8:00 pm "Gaslight" (1944)
10:00 pm "Imitation of Life" (1959)
12:15 am "The Magnificent Seven" (1960)
2:30 am "A Star Is Born" (1976)
2:30 am "A Star Is Born" (1976)
5:00 am "Showboat" (1951)
I've seen the movies about Henry VIII and Julius Caesar, plus I've seen "Gaslight" and the final three here, so that's 6 seen out of 12, which I think counts as a "push" - so that brings me up to 55 seen out of 133, which still raises me up a bit to 41.3%.
THE PLOT: A divorced couple scheme to recover the retirement money that was stolen from them.
AFTER: Well, this wanted to be both a romance film and a heist film AND a comedy, and just maybe that's a few too many things to try to be at once, if you know what I mean. The lead characters are a divorced couple, so they already know each other a bit TOO well, and it kind of feels like they come together both for the heist and because all of their other options with other lovers have come to naught, but is that really enough of a reason to get back together? Don't get me wrong, I like both of them and they're very cute together, but they're already in the post-marriage era of familiarity, so lying to each other is sort of like the default position, and well, that's not cool. Part of the reason that Kate agrees to go with her ex-husband Richard to the south of France is that she's been texting with a Frenchman, a potential suitor who just happens to live near where they're going.
The other reasons for her to go include the fact that she speaks a little French (very little, it turns out...) and also it's HER retirement money too that's at risk, her husband's pension is one of many that got stolen, but his income pays for their house, where she lives, so she's got a vested interest there in terms of not being homeless. The pension thing I don't really understand - hell, I don't understand my own pension, and I've got like three retirement accounts from companies I worked for over the years, and overall I don't know how much money is in them or how to access them when I need to. I should probably look into that at some point. But Richard's company got bought and shut down, and therefore he and his co-workers lose their pensions? I'm not sure how that worked, I figure the pension funds are usually held by a separate company that everyone invested in, and even if they company changed hands those pension funds should still be safe, right?
But I guess they pointed out here that the French businessman who bought the company may have been corrupt and stolen the funds somehow, along with closing down the company legally and liquidizing all of the assets for himself. It seems like it all should be illegal, but according to him, it's not. Then again, the Supreme Court just told our President that he has no rights to levy tariffs on international business at 10% across the board, and his response was to increase all the tariffs to 15%. Well, I guess it's all in the wording, if SCOTUS said that his tariff rate was illegal, he did change the rate, so he's in the clear? Anyway, we're all going to find out at some point that Trump and Musk stole all the money set aside for Social Security, plus all the gold from Fort Knox, so really, none of us are going to be able to retire, we'll all be in the same boat as Richard and Kate here.
But while they're in France, they learn that this corrupt businessman, Vincent, is about to get married to his girlfriend, Manon AND they figure he's also the mystery buyer who just bought this giant diamond at an auction as a wedding gift. So they put aside the fact that they're not criminal masterminds of any kind and they hatch a plan to attend the wedding, steal the diamond and either ransom it back for the retirement fund money, or just fence it on the black market for a possible greater value. They enlist the help of another couple, Penelope and Jerry, and together they're going to kidnap these two businessmen from Texas who are guests at the wedding and impersonate them - all you really need to look like a Texan is a cowboy hat, right? And so now we're talking about possible kidnapping charges, on top of diamond theft, breaking and entering, in addition to crashing the wedding, which is probably some form of trespassing. It's a lot of crime for four normal people to do, even if one of them used to be James Bond.
Even with their son doing some "hacking" for them (probably best not to dive too deep into this) is this believable? Not in the slightest. These are regular older people who probably have trouble charging their phones, or figuring out Zoom calls, really what chance do they have of pulling this off? Kate first infiltrates the bride's "hen party", pretending to be a second cousin of the groom who she's never met - and she learns a lot about how the reception is going to work, especially when Manon is going to change clothes and put the big diamond on for the reception. Things go south when Manon enters the room and breaks down crying before they can steal the diamond and replace it with the fake one (Umm, how and when did they get a copy of the world's biggest diamond? NITPICK POINT.)
It's a chance for the couple to confide in the bride about why they're really there, and what kind of a terrible man she's about to marry. Really all they want is the diamond, but in addition the bride calls off the wedding, and Vincent is so upset that he shuts down the affair and has security search everyone for the missing diamond before they're allowed to leave. This is where the other couple comes in, because Jerry's ability to smuggle contraband out inside his body turned out to be really handy (no, not like THAT, he swallows it) and the evil businessman sends Richard and Kate away in a van to be killed, but the bride again comes to their rescue before the van can be driven off a cliff.
It's just a bit of fun tonight, the film's not going to win any Best Screenplay Awards, but a heist is always a great example of the "What Can Possibly Go Wrong?" writing mantra, with the answer being absolutely everything. And it's being allowed to stay in the romance chain because of the possible re-kindling of the romance between the divorced people. But it's definitely "save the pension funds" first and then worry about the rekindled romance later. Still, getting back together wouldn't be the worst thing in the world for these two people.
Directed by Joel Hopkins (director of "Hampstead" and "Last Chance Harvey")
Also starring Emma Thompson (last seen in "Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy"), Pierce Brosnan (last seen in "Black Bag"), Timothy Spall (last seen in "The Pale Blue Eye"), Louise Bourgoin, Laurent Lafitte (last heard in "The Little Prince"), Marisa Berenson (last seen in "Liza: A Truly Terrific Absolutely True Story"), Olivier Chantreau, Ellen Thomas (last seen in "Johnny English Reborn"), Tuppence Middleton (last seen in "Cleanskin"), Jack Wilkinson, Adam Byron, John Ramm (last seen in "6 Days"), Eleanor Matsuura (last seen in "The Lady in the Van"), Bruce MacEwen (last seen in "The Brothers Grimm"), Christophe Prevost (last seen in "Life" (1999)), Sabine Crossen (last seen in "Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald"), Liz Coke, Max Hayter, Anna Brooke, Linda Hardy, Tom Morton, Sinan Bertrand, Jordan Jones, Spencer Kayden, Samantha Kelly
RATING: 5 out of 10 cans of champagne
