Customer Rating:      Summary: Tranquil... mostly Comment: I love the film. I love the music and love most of this album. Some tracks seem a bit strange such as the second one which is why I was a bit choosy as to which ones went onto my MP3 player. The main theme is haunting and deffinitely the best, the ceilidh music less memorable. All in all though this is a good soundtrack album. If only I could get hold of the film on DVD I would be very happy.
Customer Rating:      Summary: My favourite film Comment: Still my favourite film almost twenty-five years after its release. Nice to see so many other people also rate it so highly. Makes you wish you were there on Scotland's west coast.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A British Classic Comment: This is the type of film that you keep on coming back to periodically, like It's A Wonderful Life or Breakfast At Tiffany's. The film exudes warmth and leaves you with a glow inside. At its heart, it is a simple tale of Knox Oil and Gas, a large multi-national corporation whose chairman is the wondefully cranky, stargazer Happer (played brilliantly by Burt Lancaster) and which seeks to purchase several miles of unspolit Scottish coastline to build an oil refinery. Happer dispatches Macintyre played by Peter Reigert to test the water for the development and strike the deal with the local community, headed by hotel owning/lawyer Gordon Urquhart (Denis Lawson).
However, it is the human story which captures the audience. The director's little in-jokes such as the passing motorcyclist or Macintyre's journey and experiences from American Exec where he phones people in the next office to arrange meetings and lunch breaks to field man in a remote village in Western Scotland where the only phone is a payphone in an old traditional red phone box where calls to America require a copious supply of 10p pieces. The script is also superb with some fantastic repartee between Macintyre and his Scottish hosts, "Would it help if I called a vet?" (Urquhart's retort after he has served up Macintyre's pet rabbit for tea much to Macintyre's disgust).
The film has aged well and offers an interesting insight into the effect of the capitalist boom of the 1980s on the small and traditional rural parts of Britain. Superbly acted, quaint and inoffensive, this is the kind of film the British do so well and which never tires from repeat viewing.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Essential movie Comment: Agree with all the reviews. This is a beautiful, heartwarming movie.
Germany have just re-released it on their Focus Edition series, so there's no need to pay up to 90 quid on the second hand market. Just check out amazon.de
Customer Rating:      Summary: An underrated 1980's feel good movie Comment: I can just about remember watching this with my dad as a child in the 1980's and being absolutely bored to the point of insanity, watched this sometime in 2006 on film four and absolutely loved it, what an amazing change of opinion.
I am only guessing that a lot of people have never seen or even heard of this, if you haven't then you really don't know what you are missing. Without going into too much detail it is about an American junior executive (Peter Riegert) who is sent to a small Scottish fishing village by his rich greedy boss (Burt Lancaster) to buy for oil although it is a lot more complex than this and so you would be better off watching it yourself so you will know what I mean when I say this is an underrated beautiful feel good movie.
Like I said I am not going to mention any more of the story but I will just give a few examples why I really like this film. For a start I love the location of the actual village, it is one of those places where everybody knows each other but what I also really like is the way that everybody is really friendly and happy, not in a fake way but in a sincere way even though they haven't got much money, everybody genuinely seems to care about each other. It is for this reason that the young rich American that is sent there, very slowly but without realising it starts to fall in love with the place. This might sound a little seen it all before and over sentimental but you have to really trust me when I say it isn't either, it is filmed in such a unique, beautiful and uplifting way that you really could only know what I mean by watching it, it is one of those movies that I didn't want to end. WATCH THIS AND HOPEFULLY SURPRISE YOURSELF.
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