Opens Friday! Brian Cox twinkles in touching British drama, 'The Carer'

'The Carer' review: Cox’s adorable grump learns to laugh again in a British film with witty touches & profound moments

By Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian                                              Nov 4, 2016 9:35 AM 



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Wit and flair … Brian Cox in The Carer


Brian Cox gets the role of a lifetime in this warm comedy about living life to the full regardless of your age. As a colourful national treasure of an actor (think Richard Burton crossed with Ian McKellan), Cox storms through this film with personality and energy. And in his interaction with his costars, the filmmakers make some important points with offhanded charm.

Cox plays Sir Michael Gifford, a Shakespearean icon forced into retirement by Parkinson's. Living on his isolated country estate, he clashes continually with his daughter Sophia (Emilia Fox) and his assistant Milly (Anna Chancellor) about how he should live, dismissing a series of carers they have hired for him. Then the Hungarian Dorottya (Coco Konig) arrives, cracking through his bluster with her sharp intelligence, blunt compassion and her own experience performing Shakespeare's plays back home. She also conspires with him to attend a critics' ceremony at which he's being given a life achievement award. Sophia thinks he's not up to attending, so Dorottya turns to Milly and Michael's trusty driver Joseph (Karl Johnson) for help.

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Will he or won't he? Coco Konig and Brian Cox in 'The Dresser'


The simplicity of the plot helps the film avoid the usual pitfalls of these kinds of movies. There aren't any villains here (Sophia is just unusually concerned), and there's no romantic nonsense between Michael and Dorottya. The central message isn't revolutionary (people who are old or infirm shouldn't be hidden from society), and the plot never goes anywhere unexpected. But in the characters, the film finds a powerful resonance. It's funny, smart and utterly charming. And the cast deliver beautifully off-handed performances. Newcomer Konig nicely underplays Dorottya, which makes her strikingly likeable, especially as her own subplot about applying to acting school gurgles quietly in the background. Chancellor and Fox find intriguing textures in their roles, which are more complex than expected.

But of course this is Cox's show, and he dives fully into the role of a cantankerous, hammy old thespian who isn't remotely ready to go gentle into that good night. Yes, the literate script cleverly weaves quotes from Shakespeare into virtually every line of dialogue, which may make it feel a bit overwritten. But this highlights the themes beautifully, adding nuance and a sense of timelessness to the central theme. It's good to be reminded how appalling it is that that the elderly are treated as if their useful days are behind them, simply because the rest of us don't want to be reminded of our mortality. Without shouting, the film reminds us that these feisty, frail, fully alive people can show us how to live.



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Watch: 'The Carer' Official Trailer

The Carer starts Friday at the Twin!

Please note! There will be no 2:00 screening of 'The Carer.' Starting Friday, it plays the Twin daily at 4:15 & 6:30.

We have extended the run of 'Where the Universe Sings: The Spiritual Journey of Lawren Harris,' and it will play at 2:00 instead.

 

PG

"A barnstorming Brian Cox is the star attraction in The Carer, a sentimental, old-fashioned drama pitched somewhere between Sunset Boulevard and Ronald Harwood's The Dresser." - Daily Express

"Brian Cox gives a wonderful performance in The Carer, an enjoyable comedy drama about two people who form an unlikely friendship. The Scottish star plays Sir Michael Gifford, a retired Shakespearean actor who is suffering from a degenerative form of Parkinson's disease.

No screenings currently scheduled.

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