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Samantha Morton has a job on her hands in Save the Cinema.
Samantha Morton has a job on her hands in Save the Cinema. Photograph: Fae Films/© Sky UK Limited.
Samantha Morton has a job on her hands in Save the Cinema. Photograph: Fae Films/© Sky UK Limited.

Save the Cinema review – feelgood slop based on a true story

This article is more than 2 years old

Samantha Morton and Jonathan Pryce are squandered in this tale of a Welsh community’s plucky attempt to save their local cinema

Based on a true story, Save the Cinema is the kind of plucky underdog feelgood slop that the British film industry churns out on a regular basis, largely to the indifference of audiences. It tells of a small Welsh community that bands together to save their listed art deco cinema (which also doubles as the home for the local youth theatre) from shifty developers who want to pull it down and build a mall.

It’s an Ealing-alike gentle comedy populated by lovable eccentrics, and in Samantha Morton and Jonathan Pryce punches considerably above its weight in terms of casting. But the film-making decisions – from a score that sounds as though it was borrowed from an advertisement for life insurance, to the toffee and treacle colour palette, to a screenplay that is amiable, inoffensive but rarely funny – suggest that perhaps the cinema wasn’t worth saving after all.

In cinemas and on Sky Home Cinema

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