Pre the coronavirus cinema shutdown I saw Military Wives, and it is now streaming. I roughly knew the story with Gareth Malone, the title gives it away, but this is a spirited retelling by director Peter Cattaneo of how a war bound squadron's loved ones at home find ways to keep their spirits up.
Kristin Scott Thomas is perfect as Kate, the very proper wife of Greg Wise's Colonel being checked in at the gate to the Garrison her husband is in charge of. You can never be too careful on military bases. When I watched Kristin in Only God Forgives she was a revelation. But Kate is her natural habitat, the top lady on base, and slightly put out that Sharon Horgan's Lisa will be running the wives activities as the Sergeant Major's wife, when their husbands (and wife!) are away. The pair are the ying and yang to each other. Lisa who runs the NAFFI store also has to deal with her daughter flexing her wings and testing the base boundaries. But India Ria Amarteifio's Frankie is still game to watch Rocky with her mother on nights in. They are a blast.
But the activity ideas are fairly pedestrian fun for the girls. Coffee mornings, knitting and wine. Until Amy-James Kelly's Sarah suggests they start a choir. Only if it's pop music and not hymns adds Lisa. But can any of them sing?
Apparently not according to Jason Flemyng, reaching for the headphones. But it doesn't matter as they are only having a laugh, while watching Kate and Lisa battle it out out front. And yet slowly the women come together, Kate and Lisa not so much, in the feel good film that adds a drop of everything to the mix; accent, colour and class. And all the while the wives are shopping at the NAFFI, they are praying that they don't get the call. At the forefront of every family's thoughts in the military.
Here Kate provides sensitive support to one of the young girls, exploring her own heartbreak at the recent loss of her own son. Kate's method of handling her emotions is to buy off the tv shopping channels. Hilarious. I thought what was sad, and something I had never considered before with life on base, is that if you lose your serving partner, then you have to leave the base too. Given many couples probably don't actually have another home, this must be doubly hard for the bereaved.
The film doesn't have that many surprises given we know it will end at the Royal Albert Hall, but script writers Rachel Tunnard and Rosanne Flynn take a gentle comedy route to get there. As well as the sadness there are moments of pure delight, when we find Jess, played by Gaby French, can actually sing. Well obviously she can, she's Welsh. You in the back just open your mouths. And even Lara Rossi's Ruby who is tone deaf gets a vocal classification, it's not soprano!, and a line of her own to sing. She's thrilled and everyone is included here.
And when Lisa decides to write their own song for the Festival of Remembrance, using the actual lines from their letters, it is their personal emotions that are wrote bare. Apparently this was actually true and it was a touching idea. But there will be tears in the carpark before the first chorus is sung.
A great fun watch from Kristin Scott Thomas & Sharon Horgan and a largely unknown cast to me having the best and worst of times.