The Leisure Seeker
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Elderly
Couple Embarks on Eventful Road Trip
in Bittersweet Romantic Romp
Ella (Helen Mirren) and John Spencer (Donald Sutherland) have been happily married for 50+ years, and their love hasn't been diminished one iota by his battle with dementia or by hers with brain cancer. Therefore, it makes sense that the inseparable couple might resist following sound medical advice calling for them to move into different healthcare facilities.
Instead,
the feisty octogenarians decide to share one last vacation in their
mothballed RV fondly referred to as "The Leisure Seeker."
The plan is to drive all the way from Wellesley down to Key West
where John, a retired English professor, hopes to visit the home of
Ernest Hemingway.
So,
without letting their doctors or doting kids (Janet Moloney and
Christian McKay) in on what they're up to, the sneaky geezers pack
provisions and a shotgun before taking to the highway in their trusty
Winnebago. What ensues is a very eventful road trip fueled by a mix
of tenderness, nostalgia and a little gallows humor.
Thus
unfolds The Leisure Seeker, a bittersweet romantic romp
directed by Paolo Virzi (Like Crazy). The movie marks the shaky first
foray into English-language features by the talented Italian
filmmaker.
Virzi's
very lucky that he has a couple of consummate thespians playing the
leads. Helen Mirren disappears into her role, sporting a thick drawl
as a sunny Steel Magnolia originally from South Carolina. And Donald
Sutherland is quite convincing as an intermittently-lucid Alzheimer's
victim lecturing strangers about literary greats one minute, lost in
his thoughts the next.
The
story is loosely-based on Michael Zadoorian's best seller of
the same name which originally had the Spencers as Detroit natives
and setting out for Disneyland. Here, Ella and John enjoy their fair
share of excitement en route to Florida from New England, including a
confrontation where exercising their 2nd Amendment rights comes in
handy, as well as a hilarious encounter with a geriatric patient
played by the late Dick Gregory making a memorable cameo.
A
touching travelogue with just enough heartfelt moments combined with
comic relief to warrant this critic's stamp of approval.
Rated R for sexuality and mature themes
Running time: 112 minutes
Production Studios: Bac Films / Rai Cinema / Indiana Production Company
Distributor: Sony Pictures Classics
To see a trailer for The Leisure Seeker, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGGKsVFslJ8
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