The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Two Tickets to Greece (15)

- BY DAMON SMITH

Girls wanna have fun but have forgotten how in the coming-of-middle age comedy drama Two Tickets To Greece, which gallivants through Aegean islands in the company of French actresses Olivia Cote and Laure Calamy.

Their odd couple dynamic is dialled up to ear-splitting volume.

The former portrays a shy, socially-awkward divorcee, who thinks too much before she speaks and often forgets to speak at all; the latter embodies a fun-loving, outgoing chatterbox, who is the life and soul of every party with a relentless exuberance that has earned her the nickname Tinnitus.

Mamma Mia! splashed through similarly picturesqu­e Greek locations and there are moments in writer-director Marc Fitoussi’s undemandin­g, feelgood jaunt when audiences may be muttering: “Here we go again...” as his script distils familiar life lessons.

Sisterly solidarity is the name of the game.

Narrative detours to islands in the Cyclades, south-east of mainland

Greece, sustain a breezy pace and introduce colourful supporting characters to act as peacemaker­s during inevitable bickering between the central duo.

Kristin Scott Thomas materialis­es astride a quad bike after an hour as a British aristocrat by birth, nicknamed Bijou, who rejected a life of privilege in Kent to become a nomadic jewellery maker on Mykonos with an artist lover (Panos Koronis).

Her self-confessed freeloader’s casual, bohemian attire is reminiscen­t of Meryl Streep’s ebullient matriarch in the Abba musical.

It has been two years since electrothe­rapy technician Blandine (Cote) separated from her husband after he left her for a woman young enough to be a friend of their 20-year-old son Benjamin (Alexandre Desroussea­ux).

The child fears his painfully uptight mother will become a recluse as he prepares to fly the nest.

Consequent­ly, Benjamin arranges a secret reunion for his mother and her schooldays best friend, Magalie (Calamy).

In 1989, 15-year-old

Blandine (Leelou Laridan) and Magalie (Marie Mallia) swooned over the soundtrack to The Big Blue and dreamt of a pilgrimage to the Greek island of Amorgos featured in the film. Decades later, they fly to Santorini to experience the dazzling blue waters.

A disastrous ferry ride to Amorgos necessitat­es a detour to the small island of Kerinos, which has no tourist industry besides archaeolog­ical tour groups and surfers. “I came for The Big Blue but I find myself in Point Break,” complains Blandine.

Two Tickets To Greece offers an all-inclusive package deal of gentle laughter, dewy-eyed reminiscen­ce and empowermen­t.

Calamy and Cote are an appealing double act, the former wholeheart­edly embracing her firecracke­r’s casual attitude to full frontal nudity.

Fitoussi’s tour of selfdoubt following a relationsh­ip breakdown and trauma does not stray from a well-trodden path, but the scenery is consistent­ly gorgeous.

Rebirth, reinventio­n and healing in a sun-baked crucible of civilisati­on.

 ?? ?? CAST: Olivia Cote as Blandine, Laure Calamy as Magalie, Kristin Scott Thomas as Bijou and Panos Koronis as Dimitris.
CAST: Olivia Cote as Blandine, Laure Calamy as Magalie, Kristin Scott Thomas as Bijou and Panos Koronis as Dimitris.
 ?? ?? Personalit­y clashes are inevitable, as Magalie and Blandine have very different approaches to life, but sisterly solidarity is a constant theme in the film.
Personalit­y clashes are inevitable, as Magalie and Blandine have very different approaches to life, but sisterly solidarity is a constant theme in the film.
 ?? ?? Scott Thomas plays jewellery maker Bijou, who has abandoned her aristocrat­ic heritage for life on Mykonos.
Scott Thomas plays jewellery maker Bijou, who has abandoned her aristocrat­ic heritage for life on Mykonos.
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