The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry: A Bloke, His Blisters, and a Nation's Quiet Tears
Right, I've just slogged through The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, and don't get your hopes up for explosions or car chases. No, this one's a proper gut-punch: a retired everyman in inappropriate footwear trudging 500 miles across Britain to whisper hope to a dying friend. It's the kind of film that sneaks up, grabs your heart, and leaves you staring at the ceiling long after the credits, wondering if you've wasted your own life on beige routines. Plot: One Foot in Front of Regret Jim Broadbent's Harold Fry is your classic sad-sack pensioner—balding, beige trousers, a life of tinned soup and unspoken sorrows—until a letter from Queenie, his long-lost colleague fading in a northern hospice, flips the switch. Does he post a card? Pop on the train? Nah, this daft sod laces up yachting shoes and starts walking from Devon, convinced his sheer bloody-minded stomp will miracle away her cancer. Cue hallucinations of his tragic son, a gaggle of fame-hungry pilgrims ...