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Film

London,

Closing The Ring

Cert: 12A

Description: Ethel Ann mourns the death of her husband, accompanied by faithful friend Jack, who has secretly loved her for years. The past returns to haunt the elderly widow when a stranger from Belfast called Jimmy Reilly telephones to say that he has recovered a gold ring from Cave Hill, inscribed to Ethel Ann from her first true love, Teddy. Memories of the war years come flooding back and Ethel Ann recalls how, as a young woman, she planned to marry her sweetheart Teddy Gordon. However, the spectre of war decimates love's young dream, leaving Teddy's friend Chuck to honour his promise to take care of Ethel Ann.



Rating: 2 out of 5 Critic rating
Rating: 3.5 out of 5

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Dir: Richard Attenborough.

Cast: Shirley MacLaine, Christopher Plummer, Mischa Barton, Pete Postlethwaite

Country: UK/Can.

Year: 2007.

Duration: 118mins

Showing at

Love interest wanes as Mischa mourns

Mischa Barton
Yawnsome tale: Mischa Barton with Stephen Amell in Closing The Ring

Martha De Lacey, London Lite 20 Dec 2007


Mischa, Mischa, Mischa, always Mischa. Isn't it enough that every man and his grandpa loves Miss Barton? Now she has three best friends desperately in love with her in Richard Attenborough's Second World War drama.

One ties the knot with her before zooming off in his B-17 fighter, one swears to marry her should hubby not return, the other is secretly enamoured from the sidelines.

Fifty years on, Ethel Ann (now Shirley MacLaine) attends the funeral of her husband who, we suspect, wasn't the fella she originally married and loved.

Her daughter (Neve Campbell) can't understand why mum seems to be mourning the death of someone other than her dad and begins unearthing the past. Parallel to this yawnsome tale runs the more palatable relief of life in Belfast where a young lad (Martin McCann) helps an older man (Pete Postlethwaite) dig for the remains of a fighter plane.

The juxtaposition of youth's fascination with the past and the older generation's desire to bury it is all that stops this movie dissolving into sentimental dross about love among pensioners.

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