Categories
Film

Living

I have 10 double passes to the preview screening of LIVING, Monday 13 March at 6:30pm, at Palace Barracks Cinema.

For your chance to win a double pass,
1) Make sure you’re following @reviewbrisbane
2) Like this post,
2) Tag who you’d like to take along with you, and
3) Let me know: “What legacy would you like to leave behind?”

Put your answer on Twitter, Instagram (with the #LivingMovie, tagging @reviewbrisbane), Facebook, or below!

ONLY IN CINEMAS MARCH 16

SYNOPSIS:

LIVING is the story of an ordinary man, reduced by years of oppressive office routine to a shadow existence, who at the eleventh hour makes a supreme effort to turn his dull life into something wonderful – into one he can say has been lived to the full.

1953. A London shattered by WWII is still recovering. Williams (Bill Nighy), a veteran civil servant, is an important cog within the city’s bureaucracy as it struggles to rebuild. Buried under paperwork at the office, lonely at home, his life has long felt empty and meaningless. Then a shattering medical diagnosis forces him to take stock – and to try and grasp fulfilment before it goes beyond reach. At a seaside resort, chaperoned by a local decadent (Tom Burke), he flirts with hedonism before rejecting it as his solution. Back in London he finds himself drawn to the natural vitality of Margaret (Aimee Lou Wood), a young woman who once worked under his supervision and is now determined to spread her wings. Then one evening he is struck by a revelation – one as simple as it is profound – and with a new energy, and the help of Peter (Alex Sharp), an idealistic new recruit to his department, he sets about creating a legacy for the next generation.

Thanks to Transmission Films

One reply on “Living”

Being a positive influence on the lives of my children, more than anything else, and showing an example of how to have fulfilling relationships at any age.

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