Peter Bradshaw 

The Time of Their Lives review – depressingly cardboard pensioners’ comedy

Joan Collins and Pauline Collins play silver-years friends on a jolly to a funeral in France, in a sentimental comedy that tests indulgence to the limits
  
  

Creeping awfulness … Joan Collins, Pauline Collins and Franco Nero in The Time of Their Lives
Creeping awfulness … Joan Collins, Pauline Collins and Franco Nero in The Time of Their Lives Photograph: PR Company Handout

There is a creeping and depressing awfulness to this sentimental silver-years comedy, whose silly and twee style of humour and cardboard characterisation jar with its strained moments of attempted poignancy. It stars Joan Collins as the former movie star Helen, now washed up in a retirement home, who bamboozles an unhappy grandmother (Pauline Collins) into travelling with her to France for her ex-lover’s funeral. There, they have adventures with a gallant Italian artist (Franco Nero). Pauline Collins plays a next-gen variation on her Shirley Valentine persona, just as she did in a comparably terrible Brit film called Mrs Caldicot’s Cabbage War, from 2002. Writer-director Roger Goldby has a great track record in television and, incidentally, executive-produced Rebecca Johnson’s tremendous urban drama Honeytrap. But this tests indulgence to the limit, and Joan Collins’s shrill and petulant character outstays her welcome after the first few minutes.

Joan Collins in the trailer for The Time of Their Lives
 

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