Living (2022)
Bill Nighy is quietly extraordinary in this film about an aging (or ageing, as it's known across the pond) civil service department head who realizes that he's led a mundane life and finds himself desperately wanting to change. There's little action to speak of, it's all quiet and mostly terse conversations, "a bit on the frosty side," yet the story moves along briskly, with sprinkles of humo(u)r, and by its conclusion is certain to make viewers reflect upon their own lives. The cinematography is excellent, mimicking the grain and saturation of films from 70 years ago. The screenplay is written by Japanese-British author Kazuo Ishiguro of the books/films "Remains of the Day" and "Never Let Me Go," as a thoroughly English adaptation of Akira Kurosawa's 1952 Ikiru (To Live). If you like Ishiguro's mannered, reserved, economical writing style, then this motion picture will appeal to you. I'm a big fan of Ishiguro's so I loved it.