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Living

It's never too late to start.
2022 | 102m | English

(38430 votes)

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Popularity: 5 (history)

Director: Oliver Hermanus
Writer: Kazuo Ishiguro
Staring:
Details

London, 1953. Mr. Williams, a veteran civil servant, is an important cog within the city's bureaucracy as it struggles to rebuild in the aftermath of World War II. Buried under paperwork at the office and lonely at home, his life has long felt empty and meaningless. Then a devastating medical diagnosis forces him to take stock, and to try and grasp some fulfilment before it passes permanently beyond reach.
Release Date: Nov 04, 2022
Director: Oliver Hermanus
Writer: Kazuo Ishiguro
Genres: Drama
Keywords london, england, terminal illness, remake, period drama, post world war ii, 1950s
Production Companies Kurosawa Production, Film i Väst, Film4 Productions, Lipsync Productions, Number 9 Films, Filmgate Films, RocketScience, County Hall Arts, Woolley/Karlsen Productions
Box Office Revenue: $6,999,027
Budget: $10,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Bill Nighy Williams
Aimee Lou Wood Margaret Harris
Alex Sharp Peter Wakeling
Tom Burke Sutherland
Adrian Rawlins Middleton
Oliver Chris Hart
Hubert Burton Rusbridger
Zoe Boyle Mrs. McMasters
Barney Fishwick Michael
Patsy Ferran Fiona
Michael Cochrane Sir James
Lia Williams Mrs. Smith
Anant Varman Singh
Jessica Flood Mrs. Porter
Jamie Wilkes Talbot
Richard Cunningham Harvey
John Mackay Jones
Ffion Jolly Mrs. Button
Celeste Dodwell Mrs. Matthews
Jonathan Keeble Doctor Matthews
Eunice Roberts Miss Fry
Mark James Young Michael
Edward Wolstenholme Colleague
Nichola McAuliffe Mrs. Blake
Laurie Denman Piano Man
Gleanne Purcell-Brown Barwoman
Violeta Valverde Striptease Artist
Michael James Fortnums Watier
Rosie Sansom Mrs. Johnstone
Matilda Ziegler Prim Lady
Grant Gillespie Lyons Head Waiter
Robin Sebastian Distinguished Gentleman #1
David Summer Distinguished Gentleman #2
Nicky Goldie Landlady
Thomas Coombes Police Constable
Grant Crookes Commuter (uncredited)
Name Job
Oliver Hermanus Director
Kazuo Ishiguro Writer
Chris Wyatt Editor
Jamie D. Ramsay Director of Photography
Nadia Stacey Makeup Designer, Hair Designer
Sandy Powell Costume Design
Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch Original Music Composer
Akira Kurosawa Original Film Writer
Shinobu Hashimoto Original Film Writer
Hideo Oguni Original Film Writer
Peter Burgis Foley Artist
Kahleen Crawford Casting
Polly Duval Production Supervisor
Helen Scott Production Design
Danielle Hawkes Makeup Artist
Guy Common Makeup Artist
Ashleigh Lennox Costume Supervisor
Stephen Griffiths Supervising Sound Editor
Rob Hughes Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Mark Langlay-Smith Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Andy Shelley Supervising Sound Editor
Adam Thompson Standby Art Director
Georgina Devine Assistant Art Director
Adam Marshall Supervising Art Director
Tim Robinson-Boulton Standby Art Director
Andrea Stern Art Direction
Sarah Kane Set Decoration
George Every First Assistant Director
Foley Farmers Foley Artist
Brendan Hill Foley Editor
Albrecht Ihlenburg Foley Editor
Maxwell MacRae Foley Editor
Franziska Treutler Foley Artist
Dylan Voigt Sound Mixer
Dan West Storyboard Artist
Name Title
Stephen Woolley Producer
Ollie Madden Executive Producer
Kazuo Ishiguro Executive Producer
Elizabeth Karlsen Producer
Jane Hooks Co-Producer
Ko Kurosawa Executive Producer
Norman Merry Executive Producer
Peter Hampden Executive Producer
Sean Wheelan Executive Producer
Thorsten Schumacher Executive Producer
Emma Berkofsky Executive Producer
Daniel Battsek Executive Producer
Nik Powell Executive Producer
Kenzo Okamoto Executive Producer
Ian Prior Executive Producer
Kristina Börjeson Co-Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 25 42 15
2024 5 27 50 17
2024 6 19 32 11
2024 7 23 48 13
2024 8 21 33 13
2024 9 13 19 9
2024 10 17 32 10
2024 11 16 36 10
2024 12 15 24 9
2025 1 18 46 10
2025 2 13 26 3
2025 3 7 17 1
2025 4 2 6 1
2025 5 2 5 1
2025 6 2 3 1
2025 7 2 3 1
2025 8 1 3 1
2025 9 3 4 2
2025 10 4 5 3

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 3 651 780
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 277 502

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

Now I am not usually a particular fan of Bill Nighy but in this he is very much at the top of his game. An adaptation of Kurosawa's "Ikuru" (1952), the setting is shifted to London where Nighy is the fastidious "Mr. Williams". A local civil servant heading up the public works department of the Londo ... n County Council. His small team has some new blood in the form of "Mr. Wakeling" (Alex Sharp) whose baptism in the department is to accompany three ladies (and the audience) on a revelative journey through the pillar-to-post red tape that "Williams" himself facilitates - all guaranteeing that very little actually ever gets done! Leaving early one day, we discover that this erstwhile precise and predictable individual is seriously ill. Unable and/or unwilling to divulge this information to his son, he absconds to the seaside where he encounters "Sutherland" (Tom Burke) who gives him a relaxing tour of the local hotspots before he return to London and happens upon one of his team "Miss Harris" (Aimee Lou Wood). A posh luncheon ensues and the elderly gent and his young colleague start to bond. This bond soon has - unbeknown to either of them - tongues wagging, but when she gets a new job he finds himself drawn to her. Drawn to her joie de vivre and general enthusiasm for a life he knows he will not have for too much longer. That becomes contagious as he decides to apply himself, and his team, to achieving at least one more thing in a professional capacity! It is a gently paced and evocative story that deals with that sense of re-prioritisation faced by anyone when faced with a profound change in circumstances. Nighy has a delightfully understated manner to his performance here, Wood is also effective as his increasingly valuable confidente and Oliver Hermanus manages to retain much of the charm and subtly potent impetus of the original Ishiguro story. It is beautifully scored by Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch who incorporates original and powerful themes with established classical ones. The costumes and overall aesthetic of the film complements well the classy and impressive performances that resonated in quite a thought-provoking, and multi-layered fashion as I watched it. I was engaged by this from start to finish and I really quite enjoyed it.

Nov 05, 2022
narrator56
9.0

This is one of the better “quiet” movies, as I call them, that I have watched in a long time. Bill Nighy seems to excel in restrained roles, where he speaks quietly and shows emotion subtly. I am thinking especially of The Girl in the Cafe, where he oddly enough also plays a civil servant. Nighy ... is wonderful and methodical (in a good way) as a man who is thawing out from a repetitious, paralyzed life after he receives life-altering news. He even impresses when he sings a song in the same quiet, restrained manner. A flashback is applied in an odd way nearer the end of the movie, but it works as an imaginative way to fill in the details of the ending. I fully expect to watch this again.

Nov 16, 2023