Trailers & Videos

Official Trailer

Beautiful
Cast

Gillian Anderson
Raynor Winn

Jason Isaacs
Moth Winn

James Lance
Grant

Hermione Norris
Polly

Tucker St Ivany
Tom Winn

Denis Lill
Dog Walker

Angus Wright
Doctor Shaw

Georgia Henshaw
Housing Officer

Pippa Hinchley
Ice Cream Seller

Amy Griffiths
Tessa

Sasha Frost
Grant’s Guest

Lloyd Hutchinson
Bathing Man

Robbie O'Neill
Sealy’s Partner

James Craven
Male Youth

Marianne Elliott
(uncredited)

Bern Collaço
Shopkeeper

Lainey Shaw
Boss

Dan Ball
Lead Backpacker
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Faced with losing their business, their farmhouse and their children to university, married Ray (Gillian Anderson) and husband Moth (Jason Isaacs) are down to their last few hundred quid and decide to go for a walk. A very, very, long walk - along England’s south west coast towards Land’s End. Armed with only a rucksack each, they set off along the rugged coastline and along the way we learn a little about what caused their predicament, about him suffering from the debilitating CBD, and about what makes this couple tick as despite them living and sleeping rough, blagging what food they can and him getting mistaken for a famous local celebrity, they seem to be, and wish to remain, almost magnetically joined together. It’s a simple story that is rich in character with which both Anderson and Isaacs delivering amiably and sometimes quite poignantly. As they trek, we also get a chance to enjoy some of the spectacular scenery of this windswept part of the country and those locales provide for a few moments of (tea-time) peril, some gentle banter and some of that life-affirming stuff that is often delivered in barrels but here a little more subtly and characterfully. It’s all based on a true journey and she took part in the production so it has a sense of authenticity to it, and it makes you think a little along the lines of “there but for the grace of God” as real, ordinary, people take adversity by the scruff of the neck. It doesn’t really need a cinema, but a bit like “The Last Bus” (2021) is one of those British dramas that works.
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