Number 439 on the top 1000 films of all time is Richard Curtis' romantic-comedy with a science-fiction twist 'About Time.'
Tim Lake (Domnhall Gleeson) has just turned twenty-one. His father James (Bill Nighy) informs him that all the men in their family upon turning twenty-one develop the ability to change their past. Rather than using it to find fame or fortune, Tim uses it to find love working as a lawyer in London. Cue the beautiful American Mary (Rachel Mcadams.)
Richard Curtis is well-known for his romantic comedies from Notting Hill to Four Weddings and a Funeral to Love Actually - all starring the who's who of British acting royalty, as well as the odd American or two. In many ways, About Time retreads the familiar beats we would expect from romantic comedies: a naive, bumbling but ultimately good-hearted young man navigates the difficulties of love and life before finding his special one.
However, Richard Curtis kept things fresh by adding a sci-fi twist. Tim discovers he has the ability to change the past and like many of us he uses it to fix all his mistakes until he discovers that it's the mistakes that make us human. It's not the most revolutionary of revelations and the time travel mechanics aren't the clearest, but that's not really important.
Perhaps that's because the film had plenty of laughs from Tim's foot-in-mouth syndrome to his father James' foul-mouthed playwright friend Harry Chapman (Tom Hollander) to brilliant cameos from Richard Griffiths and Richard E. Grant. There were plenty of laughs to balance out all the sentimentality of which there was a lot. What else would you expect from a romantic comedy?
Domnhall Gleeson made a for a charming leading man. He fit the role of Tim well with all the requisite charisma, but also plenty of space to grow. Rachel Mcadams was also good as she continued her string of rom-com successes. I do wonder if that's why she went onto to star in True Detective as the emotionally damaged Antigone Bezzerides. But the true star was Bill Nighy. He was the source of much of the film's comedy and pathos.
If I were to criticise anything, it would be Margot Robbie's brief inclusion. She played, I think, an early English love interest of Tim. I say "I think," as her accent varied between her native Australian and an upper-class English. But this was early on in her career.
I really enjoyed About Time. Yes, it was overly-sentimental but it had a great cast and brilliantly used a sci-fi twist to keep everything fresh.