South Wales Echo

WHAT’S NEW PUSSYCAT?

Feline Bob is back for an im-purr-fect festive tale

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★★★ ★★

DEDICATED to the memory of the eponymous ginger feline, A Christmas Gift From Bob is a life-affirming drama of small and simple pleasures, which celebrates the bond between a pet and its human protector.

Charles Martin Smith’s sequel to the 2016 drama A Street Cat Named Bob claws the great tradition of festive films that have one eye on the turkey, trimmings and tinsel and the other on tears and tantrums.

Heartstrin­gs are plucked merrily by screenwrit­er Garry Jenkins, who plunders James Bowen’s memoir A Gift From Bob for his narrative framework and garnishes with all the cinematic trimmings: rosycheeke­d carol singers spreading festive cheer, (fake) snow falling on cue and a poignant, handmade present nestled beneath a tree.

All that sugar – and there is plenty – is offset by the bitterness of personal loss (a father memorialis­ing his terminally-ill child at Christmas) and boo-hiss pantomime villainy courtesy of an animal welfare officer, who is determined to separate the four-legged hero from his owner.

Elements of the script are malnourish­ed – some supporting characters serve the plot while the reconcilia­tion of one fractured family is rushed and delivers a glancing emotional blow rather than a mighty wallop.

A Christmas Gift From Bob picks up shortly after the first film.

James Bowen (Luke Treadaway) attends his publisher’s Christmas party with Bob the Cat (playing himself) perched on his shoulder. His first book is a success and an editor excitedly reminds him that a follow-up is due by early summer.

“I’m sure you’ll get an idea soon. They often happen when you least expect it,” smiles author Dame Jacqueline Wilson (playing herself), who meets James by the cloakroom as they sneak out early from the festivitie­s.

A chance encounter with a homeless man on the streets of London provides James with the creative spark.

In flashback – captioned A Christmas Past – he recalls a bitterly cold winter when the money he earns from busking on the cobbles of Covent Garden barely covers the cost of heating and food for Bob.

Charity worker Bea (Kristina TonteriYou­ng) and local shop owner Moody (Phaldut Sharma) support James as he wrestles with self-doubt following a run-in with animal welfare officers Ruth (Pepter

Lunkuse) and Leon (Tim Plester).

A Christmas Gift From Bob lacks the emotional grit of the original film – James’s hard-fought battle with heroin addiction – but there are still plenty of reasons to sob.

Treadaway is quietly affecting as a survivor, who is blissfully unaware of his positive impact on others, much like James Stewart’s suicidal family man in It’s A Wonderful Life.

Smith’s sequel doesn’t scale the dizzying heights of Frank Capra’s 1946 festive fable but casts a similarly warm glow by trumpeting the enduring power of the human spirit in the face of adversity.

A Christmas Gift From Bob is in selected cinemas unaffected by lockdown, and available to rent at home.

Kristina Tonteri-Young as Bea and Luke Treadaway as James Bowen

Bob the cat (as himself) and Luke Treadaway as James Bowen

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