The Song of Lunch
- TV Movie
- 2010
- 50m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
A London publisher recounts a lunchtime reunion with a former lover, in poetic monologue.A London publisher recounts a lunchtime reunion with a former lover, in poetic monologue.A London publisher recounts a lunchtime reunion with a former lover, in poetic monologue.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 4 nominations total
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
A beautiful tale of two long lost lovers that doesn't fail to lift your spirit. Despite only being a short film I enjoyed it very much. Perfectly assembled with great cinematography which compliments the original poem greatly. The melancholy and passion between the protagonists were definitely sustained through out the film steering it away from titles bearing names such as Depressing-love-story-for-the-over-40s or a Horny- middle-aged-people-have-a-rendez-vous. No better actors could have been picked for this. A brilliant performance on behalf of both Alan Rickman and Emma Thompson who portray the characters exact to how I had imagined them to be.
All in all 'tis a great film. However, I advise people to read the book first before watching the film.
All in all 'tis a great film. However, I advise people to read the book first before watching the film.
Christopher Reed's poem 'The Song of Lunch' is brought brilliantly to life here by Alan Rickman and Emma Thompson, two fine actors and, though like most actors they sometimes waste time (and make money, no doubt) in rubbish, here we see them both at the top of their games. Rickman has the harder role, since he also has to narrate the verse; but Thompson handles herself excellently opposite him, never attempting to claim a larger space than is available but filling what is there perfectly. The story is a classic male tragedy, of a drunken middle-aged man whose awareness of his own increasing unattractiveness is a self-fulfilling prophesy; but the observation and psychology are razor sharp, and the words clear and cutting. It could be thought a bold move to dramatise a poem; but with this level of quality at all levels, perhaps the success of this project was never really in doubt.
This is the worst thing I've seen since My Dinner with Andre over thirty years ago. It's worse than Hook, worse than Australia, worse than the worst action movie I used to take my teenage son to see to humor him.
Is he supposed to be unlikable, or merely a bore?
What could she have possibly ever seen in him?
Who cares about his "poetry"?
The lines are unbearable, not to mention childishly vulgar, when not being unintentionally laughable.
Is this what "art" has become, ridiculously pretentious, lacking in content, causing one to itch with utter boredom?
Is he supposed to be unlikable, or merely a bore?
What could she have possibly ever seen in him?
Who cares about his "poetry"?
The lines are unbearable, not to mention childishly vulgar, when not being unintentionally laughable.
Is this what "art" has become, ridiculously pretentious, lacking in content, causing one to itch with utter boredom?
Combining the art of filmmaking and the art of poetry is extremely difficult, very complex undertaking for any director. It is much easier and with more opportunities to just film from a screenplay, where dialogue can flow with no absolute firm structure, do an actor can or director can change a word or two or more. No one can improvise working with a poem. Song of Lunch works like a fine waltz. Christopher Reid's poem is brilliant, as are Alan Rickman and Emma Thompson who dance his stanzas, as we hear them narrated by Rickman. The pacing of this film is so well done that we are are pulled in immediately and stay in pace up until the ending.
To all the Harry Potter nerds, Alan Rickman narrating for a whole 50 mins. In a film, what else do you need?
The song of Lunch is my recent find while browsing through the filmography of Emma Thompson. With run-time less than an hour, this TV movie is a poetic monologue of a struggling writer who's having a lunch date with his ex-lover. The whole movie shot from the POV of Rickman who's still obsessed with Thomson after all these years of their separation. Shot in an Italian restaurant on the streets of London where the two used to hang out while they were young, this drama clearly emphasizes on how the guy has remained stuck up to his long gone romantic venture while lady has moved on with her life and is there only for a formal reunion. The way he looks at her while drinking the wine and remembering the time they had together is a treat to watch.
If you like watching two people having random conversation, you will definitely like this.
The song of Lunch is my recent find while browsing through the filmography of Emma Thompson. With run-time less than an hour, this TV movie is a poetic monologue of a struggling writer who's having a lunch date with his ex-lover. The whole movie shot from the POV of Rickman who's still obsessed with Thomson after all these years of their separation. Shot in an Italian restaurant on the streets of London where the two used to hang out while they were young, this drama clearly emphasizes on how the guy has remained stuck up to his long gone romantic venture while lady has moved on with her life and is there only for a formal reunion. The way he looks at her while drinking the wine and remembering the time they had together is a treat to watch.
If you like watching two people having random conversation, you will definitely like this.
Did you know
- TriviaThe photo on the dust jacket of the lead female character's husband's book is one of Greg Wise, Dame Emma Thompson's real-life husband.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Wright Stuff: Episode #14.45 (2010)
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content