Greatest Days

Never forget.

6.1
20231h 52m

Based on the Take That musical, five best friends have the night of their lives seeing their favourite boy band in concert. Twenty-five years later, their lives have changed in many different ways as they reunite for one more epic show by their beloved band, to relight their friendship and discover that maybe their greatest days are ahead of them.

Production

Logo for SPG3 Entertainment
Logo for Ascot Elite Entertainment Group
Logo for Elysian Film Group

Available For Free On

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Interview with Jayde Adams & Amaka Okafor

Interview with Jayde Adams & Amaka Okafor

Cast

Photo of Alice Lowe

Alice Lowe

Heather

Photo of Matthew McNulty

Matthew McNulty

Passport Checker Stuart

Photo of Lara McDonnell

Lara McDonnell

Young Rachel

Photo of Emma Amos

Emma Amos

Claire’s Mum

Photo of Alfredo Tavares

Alfredo Tavares

Security Staff

Photo of Nicolas Politis

Nicolas Politis

Police Officer

Photo of Ermar Alexander

Ermar Alexander

Debbie's Dad

Photo of Adrian Hood

Adrian Hood

Irate Motorist Vic

Photo of Barry O'Connor

Barry O'Connor

Rachel’s Dad

Photo of Gary Barlow

Gary Barlow

Train Busker

Photo of Mark Owen

Mark Owen

Train Busker

Photo of Howard Donald

Howard Donald

Train Busker

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

I didn't especially like the truly sterile stage musical and sadly I can't really exude about this either. It all centres around four ladies who win a competition to go and see a Take That reunion concert. The girls have become estranged over the years, but this prize offers them a chance to reunite. Initially it all goes fine - each has gone on to varying degrees of success and happiness in adult life - but after a few largely predictable escapades the fault lines soon start to appear and the inevitable tragedy from their past rears it's ugly head to contextualise their drifting apart and their present, somewhat strained, relationship. The songs themselves were never my favourite either - I always found Gary Barlow's voice to be a bit nasal and toneless - and here they are performed to some extremely precise (and not very natural) choreography by five lads who resemble the original band not a jot. Die hard fans will probably love this, and it does remind you of just how many hits this band had in their relatively short career - but for me, this film was all just a bit too formulaic with an ending that reminded me of the far superior ensemble effort that was Leslie Bricusse's "Scrooge" (1970).

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