‘Finding Your Feet’ Bonita International’s audience choice winner
The 4th Annual Bonita Springs International Film Festival wrapped up on Academy Award night with the announcement of the prestigious Tom Falciglia Audience Choice Award. Finding Your Feet was the people’s choice.
“Laughs, tears and mid-life awakenings abound in this feature from Richard Loncraine (The Special Relationship) starring Imelda Staunton, Timothy Spall, Celia Imrie and a scene-stealing Joanna Lumley as members of an amateur dance troupe in London,” writes Harry Windsor for The Hollywood Reporter. “A romantic comedy fronted by leads nobody would mistake for matinee idols and imbued with all the more pathos for it, this self-aware heart-tugger manages to make even rickety old cliches about taking a ‘leap of faith’ easily digestible.”
The action starts when ‘Lady’ Sandra Abbott (Academy Award nominee Imelda Staunton, Maleficent, Vera Drake) discovers that her husband of forty years (John Sessions) is having an affair with her best friend (Josie Lawrence). She seeks refuge in East London with her estranged, older sister Bif (Celia Imrie, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, Bridget Jones’ Baby). The two could not be more different – Sandra is a fish out of water next to her outspoken, serial dating, free-spirited sibling. But different is just what Sandra needs at the moment, and she reluctantly lets Bif drag her along to a community dance class, where gradually she starts finding her feet and romance as she meets her sister’s friends, Charlie (Timothy Spall), a handyman with a van who lives on a houseboat after selling his home to pay for the care of his wife who is suffering from dementia; Jackie (Joanna Lumley), an inveterate divocee and former barrister; and Ted (David Hayman), Charlie’s lonely, widower neighbor.
Finding Your Feet is all about second chances – a second chance for Sandra to patch up things with her older sister, Bif (the nickname resulting because as a child Sandra couldn’t pronounce her given name of Elizabeth) – a second chance at becoming a dancer – a second chance for real romantic love – and a second chance to experience life the way life is meant to be lived.
With so many in the BIFF audiences of the same age and generation as the characters dancing across the screen, it’s small wonder that Finding Your Feet such a responsive chord with the viewers who attended this year’s Bonita Springs International Film Festival.
March 3, 2019.
RELATED POSTS.
- And the winner is ….
- A look at Danish thriller ‘The Guilty,’ BIFF Best Feature Narrative
- Ky Dickens ‘Zero Weeks’ wins Bonita Int’l Best Feature Documentary award
- BIFF best short documentary is ‘G is for Gun’
- BIFF Best Short Animation, ‘Night Light’ illustrates impact of light pollution on sea turtle hatchlings
- Molly Smith’s ‘I Don’t Know’ wins BIFF Best Florida Youth Film award
- Bonita Springs Int’l Film Festival opens with ‘The King’ on February 21
- Packed with metaphorical content, ‘King’ chugs along like Elvis’ ’63 Rolls Royce
- Spotlight on ‘King’ maker Eugene Jarecki
- Spotlight on ‘King’ executive producer Rosanne Cash
- Spotlight on BIFF Elvis tribute artists Dan Cunningham and Rob Lutz
- Freddie Mercury Tour rocks huge BIFF opening night crowd
- A peek at short comedy ‘Actors Anonymous’
- Judy Copeland dishes on the making of ‘Actors Anonymous’
- Spotlight on indie film actor, screenwriter and producer Judy Copeland
- ‘Talk to Me’ actor Judy Copeland scores Best Actor at Fort Myers Beach Film Festival
- ‘Happy Family’ wins BIFF 2017 Best Florida Film award
- D’Onofrio ‘Cold Reading and Monologue’ workshop
- Frank Blocker screenwriting workshop
- Spotlight on SAG/AFTRA actor and playwright Frank Blocker
- ‘Strangers on the Earth’ Q&A stimulates audience’s wanderlust
- Screaming orphans headline Bonita Springs Int’l Film Festival closing night festivities
- ‘Bird’s Eye’ lyrical ode to human spirit and creative collaboration
- Focus on ‘Bird’s Eye’ screenwriter and actor Erin Beute
- ‘Bird’s Eye’ director Scott Poiley in the spotlight
- ’50 Words’ features cute concept, exceptional acting and satisfying character arc
- Spotlight on ’50 Words’ actor, screenwriter and producer Kathryn Parks
- Spotlight on ’50 Words’ director Mark Palmer
- Conceptually and structurally, ‘Ghost in the Woods’ is a horror film breath of fresh air