Black Forest Cake for Easter 2013

I cannot help myself, going through some more old posts, I just like to republish for instance this one from Easter 2013: This was seven years ago!

I wrote the following on Easter Monday 2013:

It was great to see the family over Easter. It’s Easter Monday today, another holiday. Today Peter and I are on our own again. We took some pictures yesterday with our lovely eight months old great-grandson Lucas and the whole family while they were at our place. We had Black Forest Cake. Baby Lucas had a taste of it too and liked it! He had his bottle, sitting upright and holding the bottle all by himself. He was keen to finish it right to the last drop!

Peter and I might go for a drive later on. For lunch we are going to have just left-overs from yesterday. We had yesterday a very colourful lunch. Unfortunately I didn’t take a picture of my lunch-plate. However it definitely looked very colourful. There was “Hackbraten” (Meatloaf!) with gravy and champignons, Brussels sprouts, red cabbage and boiled potatoes. Also a glass of beer with it. It’s such a simple meal but everyone liked it. We had Caroline and Matthew for lunch with us. Later on all the others arrived for afternoon coffee and cake and a little welcome drink. We were ten adults plus Baby Lucas. In about two weeks we are going to spend some time with our family in Melbourne.

Our drive to Melbourne in a rented car is going to be a great event for us. We don’t drive straight to Melbourne but have a few overnight stops on the way to see a bit of the country. We are very much looking forward to this.

Peter’s sister Ilse writes this is going to be an unforgettable Easter for them for there’s still snow all over Berlin. The asparagus farmers in the area fear the worst for their crops. It’s just too cold to grow anything. Large parts of Europe are still in the grip of winter. How much they long for warmer days and a bit of sunshine!

We had plenty of chocolate Easter eggs. I helped myself to quite a few and loved them!

A few days later I was able to publish some Easter photos from 2013:

 

Black Forest Cake

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Finally I am able to show you our lovely Black Forest Cake that we had for Easter Sunday. Peter said this morning something about our router being quite old and the modem being even older. So he went today, bought a new modem/router, all in one, connected it and voila, now we can upload pictures again. What a relief!

So for good measure I include now some more pictures from Easter Sunday.

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Little Lucas, our baby great-grandson, was allowed a taste of that delicious Black Forest Cake. He loved it and later on licked the spoon! He also loved to drink out of his bottle.

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We all love little Lucas very much.

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For breakfast I had hard boiled egg with a garnish of salmon.

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Here are a few more of Easter Sunday’s pictures which I only just found in the files when I looked a bit more. There is a picture with Grandma Monika in the background holding little Lucas. In one of the other photos you see Ryan, the dad of Lucas. The brother of Ryan is at the table too but cannot be seen properly. Sorry, Troy, that I didn’t catch you properly.

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Easter Sunday 2020 – Uta’s Diary

Easter 2020. The Coronavirus is all over the world. Self isolation applies to most people that are not working, especially the elderly people. This is an Easter in self isolation for Peter and myself.

On Easter Saturday we went to ALDI. They had plenty of Easter eggs left. We bought a few things for decoration. I wanted our breakfast table on Easter Sunday to look a bit like Easter, take a few pictures and publish them.

So today I did download these pictures that I took a couple of days ago on Easter  Sunday. I found a candle to light and I found a flower in our backyard to decorate the table with. Peter and I we each had two soft boiled eggs for breakfast. We also had Filter Coffee. And some honey with our bread.

We also had a good lunch with beef patties and vegetables. For desert Peter preferred sitting in his easy chair at the small table. The easy chair keeps his back pain in check! The desert included some fresh raspberries. There was also red wine.

We still had some Christmas stollen in the freezer and had it defrosted for Easter. So we liked a slice of the stollen with some afternoon tea on Easter Sunday. It was really quite yummy cake!

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This bag with the little Easter eggs found its way to the frontyard of a neighbouring place where two little girls live!

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Maybe tomorrow, Wednesday, Monika can stop at our place for a little while on her way home from work. So I might have a chance to give her the above eggs. I hope she likes these! These little Easter bunnies I want to keep for when hopefully the great-grandkids can come and visit again!

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It has been many weeks now since we could see any of our great-grandchildren!

They are not allowed near us because of the Coronavirus! Social distancing has to be adhered to. We do have to stick to this. So any Easter egg hunting is out of the question this year for kids that do not live in our neighbourhood!

Last year we saw Carter, Alexander and Lucas in Unanderra a few days before Easter:

 

 

Gratitude Bell and Cascades Walk

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On Saturday, the 2nd of March 2019 Peter and I did walk up to the NAN TIEN GRATITUDE BELL. This bell is being chimed in gratitude for our ancestors. I love the sound of this bell. It travels far across the surrounding country.

The walk was quite exhausting for us oldies. But we enjoyed it. We walked slowly and took frequent rests. Later on we met up with our granddaughter and her friend at the Nan Tien Tea rooms. We were happy that they had come from Newcastle to visit us for the weekend. Son Martin had also come for a weekend visit from Benalla in Victoria and was happy that he could meet up with his daughter.

Saturday night we went for dinner to the Dapto Leagues Club where we met up with our daughter Monika and a lot of her family. The next day, on Sunday, we went with our visitors to the foot of Macquarie Pass for a little walk called the Cascades Walk.

 

 

https://www.illawarramercury.com.au/story/5303939/video-tour-of-illawarras-best-waterfall-walk-for-beginners-and-kids/

 

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I took this picture while Peter holds my walking stick!

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I wrote in a comment on the 12th of March 2019 the following:

. . . to be reminded of our ancestors is always special to us.
A week later, on Sunday (March 10) we had another beautiful day with Caroline, Matthew and Matthew’s Mum. It was a lovely late summer day and we all went to the Port Kembla Swimming Centre. Later on we had a great lunch at our place.

https://www.google.com/search?q=Port+Kembla+swimming&tbm=isch&source=univ&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwi3uuOwgfzgAhWCj-YKHU1eAp0QsAR6BAgEEAE&biw=1229&bih=603

Om the 13th of March 2019 I wrote in a comment:

We find that early in the morning it is never too warm to go for a little walk, that is we walk for a little bit every morning before breakfast. I take only about 4 or 5 minutes to walk to my favourite trees in the park behind our complex of villas. Peter and I usually leave our place together. I do walk very slowly just to stretch my legs a bit. Walking back home I can usually walk a bit faster. Peter uses some spray on his tongue that helps his breathing. He aims to walk straight away at a faster pace for 8 minutes. He walks quite a bit faster than I walk. I watch him walking in the park in the distance. On the way back, when he passes me, he calls out (just for fun!) Good Morning! And I call back: Good Morning! The whole park area feels to me very private, meaning even if I owned the whole area, I could not make any better use of it than walking there for a few minutes every morning! These days the sun comes up later and later. So often we miss out on some sun when we walk early in the moring. However, I love the mornings, when the sun does shine through the trees! When daylight saving is finally finished, the sun will be up a little bit earlier again. 🙂

Here is another comment I made on the 12th of March 2019:

. . . we had two beuatiful walks on that weekend, one on Saturday and another one on Sunday. The best thing was that some family took us to these beautiful places. 🙂
Since Peter and I are very elderly, we went at our own pace, while the others could roam about at their much faster pace. 🙂

https://www.illawarramercury.com.au/story/5303939/video-tour-of-illawarras-best-waterfall-walk-for-beginners-and-kids/

 

 

 

This is actually the same walk that is mentioned in this post:

https://auntyuta.com/2020/04/12/easter-2015/

I think I was very brave last year to venture on this walk with Peter. When I started walking I knew I could not very well have made it as far as to the waterfall. The others were of course much too fast for me. I was grateful that Peter stayed with me. When the others returned, we took a path that goes right back to that large meadow at the entrance. Peter chose then to walk ahead with the others towards the meadow. However I did get some support from a younger very fit person. I think she thought nothing of  it giving me a helping hand. I was so grateful for that!

Easter 2016

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Lucas looked around in our backyard and called it a “forest”. He loved running from the side gate on the south side of the house back to the table on the north side. He kept running, and running, and running with little Alexander always following him. That was after they had been looking for Easter eggs. Alexander was happy, when he found just one little egg. He did eat it straight away and let his big brother look for all the other eggs!

Our Granddaughter Natasha, the boys’ Aunty,  took some pictures of her Nephews while sitting at the table with them.

Some weeks ago we went to the Bulli markets, where Peter bought some gelato. Daughter Caroline took some pictures of Peter buying the gelato and of me trying to take a picture of it. I also took a picture of Caroline walking towards us.

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Easter 2015

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We were lucky yesterday, on Easter Sunday: There was beautiful sunshine all day after a lot of rain during the previous days. Early in the morning we went with Caroline and Matthew to the bottom of Macquarie Pass. It was easy parking there. At the other end of this beautiful green grass area is a path that leads to a waterfall. Everyone wanted to go on that walk to the waterfall. They all said I should come too. But I decided against it. I thought the path might be too slippery for me. I did not want to risk it. I had taken a picnic rug along and made myself comfortable near a table with bench. Peter took this picture of me:

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I thought it was very pleasant to sit for about an hour in the morning sun. I did not mind this at all while the others disappeared to walk to the waterfall. All the following pictures Peter did bring back from their walk.

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In preparation for breakfast . . .
In preparation for breakfast . . .

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For breakfast we had filter coffee, boiled eggs, warm bread rolls out of the oven, as well as some orange juice.
After breakfast at eight we left for the drive to the bottom of Macquarie Pass from where Peter, Caroline and Matthew went on their nice little walk to the waterfall while I stayed outside in the beautiful, warming sun. Towards 11 o’clock we were on the way back home. Matthew was driving. He stopped on the way at a Pie shop in Dapto that was open! Several pieces of cake and a few pies were purchased.

So at eleven at was time for us to have our morning tea and to eat some of the things from the Pie shop. For lunch we had to wait quite a while for Monika and her family were a bit late in arriving. All in all we expected six additional persons for lunch.

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Monika came in her car. She has a special child’s seat in her car. Her daughters Tash and Krystal came along too, as well as Tiana, the daughter of Mark. Krystal and Tiana are university students, whereas Tash has a job with the Postal Service. Tash is going to have an engagement celebration this coming Saturday. Krystal turned 18 on Easter Sunday. She had a birthday party the night before her birthday. She started university at the start of this year when she was not even 18 yet. Monica’s daughter Roxy did not come yesterday. But we are going to see her for sure at Tash’s party next Saturday. This is also when we are going to see Troy as well as Ryan and Ebony with their two little sons. It was so lovely that we could see Lucas already yesterday. Tiana kept carrying him. She said he was so cuddly. He did feel a bit tired for a while after they arrived. I think he had already seen Ebony’s parents in the morning and then he was at grandma Monika’s place  for a while. After lunch Lucas went outside for some egg hunting. Everybody watched him as he was doing this! Tash and I took pictures.

Back to lunch now. Caroline and Matthew had earlier baked the leg of lamb.  We had bought this meat, 2.7 kg of it,  at Aldi’s the morning after Peter’s eye op.  It only needed heating. Matthew sliced it. I had cooked some red cabbage the previous day. This also needed just some heating up. Caroline cooked green beans and sweat potatoes. Some other potatoes were baked in the oven together with the meat. Caroline filled up a jug with tap water and set the table with this jug, glasses, plates and cutlery. Peter sat up some extra chairs around the table. I think all I had done was to cut the sweat potatoes and to help with the tablecloth. I also took a few pictures of the lunch table.

In between I had another turn of rapid heartbeat. So I stretched out a bit on the sofa to calm down. A few times I did get a bit short of breath. When this happens, I know, I have to take a rest. I am always worried, others might think, I am just lazy! Anyhow, here are the lunch pictures now;

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I served myself only vegies, not meat for me please.
I served myself only vegies, not meat for me please.
Lucas had no problem with counting all this eggs in his basket.
Lucas had no problem with counting all this eggs in his basket.

Yes, he knew at every stage how many eggs there were in the basket. Later on Tiana made him count all the chicks he could see. I think he counted right up to twenty!

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The girls left early with Lucas to take him home. Tiana drove. She took Monika’s car. Monika went home later with Mark who had come in his car. He had come a bit later for he first had to do something for his mother.

We had a nice coffee afternoon with Monika, Mark, Caroline and Matthew. We animatedly talked about a lot of things. And we did not even drink one bit of liquor! Nobody thought of doing the dishes that had piled up in the kitchen. I had no idea Caroline and Matthew wanted to travel back to Sydney soon after Monika and Mark left. I thought they would stay till Easter Monday. Nobody had told me they wanted to be home on Sunday already. I am afraid I said in a probably snappish sounding voice: So, you are going to leave us with all the dishes!

Caroline became upset. Peter said she cried. Peter said he could do the dishes. I would not have to do a thing. In the end Caroline and Matthew decided they would catch their train one hour later and do the dishes in the meantime. I was very happy that Peter did not have to do the dishes. I probably could have helped him with putting away some of the dishes. However it would really have been such an effort for us oldies. I felt we needed a more restful evening.

I was very grateful that Caroline and Matthew cleaned up the kitchen. They did it very quickly and efficiently. I thanked them for it before they left and apologised that I had been playing up so much. When Caroline had arrived back in Sydney she sent Peter a message on his phone, saying that she loved us both.

When Peter accused me of treating Caroline like a slave, I felt really awful.

My Thoughts on WW1 as well as WW2 and our ‘War Cabinet’ to fight the Coronavirus

First of all I want to reprint the following:

“Labor’s treasury spokesman, Jim Chalmers, looked to the postwar experience to argue for a new post-crisis social contract, focused on employment.

“When Curtin established the Department of Post War Reconstruction it was almost Christmas in 1942, and when Chifley was made minister by the start of 1943, most of Europe was still occupied by the Nazis and Japanese bombs were still falling on northern Australia.

“Those two Labor leaders knew that if Australia was to prosper after the war it needed to rewrite the social contract during the war, and to be meaningful, full employment needed to be at the core of it.”

The economist Mariana Mazucatto argues the crisis is an opportunity to work out how to do capitalism differently.

“This requires a rethink of what governments are for: rather than simply fixing market failures when they arise, they should move towards actively shaping and creating markets that deliver sustainable and inclusive growth,” she said, in arguments that have been backed by the Pope.”

The above is an extract of this article by Lenore Taylor:

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/apr/04/australia-can-be-a-better-fairer-place-after-the-coronavirus-if-were-willing-to-fight-for-it

Yesterday I did publish this extract here:

https://auntyuta.com/2020/04/04/australia-after-the-coronavirus-and-environmental-sustainability/

Now, why I do come back to it, is the following:

I am not an expert, but I do have some general knowledge about the two World Wars and their aftermaths, and I am aware that our Australian Government right now is willing to work with the Opposition to work out what is the best way to fight the Coronavirus. So, this is a bit like a ‘War Cabinet’, right?

My thoughts on this is, why can they not right now work on the important subject of the Environmental Sustainability that needs to be considered after this Coronavirus nightmare?

Do any of you out there have some ideas how this could be achieved?

Can we ask our government for instance to establish a ‘Department of Post War Reconstruction’?

Please, think about this that I am sure you know from the History Books:

“Those two Labor leaders knew that if Australia was to prosper after the war it needed to rewrite the social contract during the war, and to be meaningful, full employment needed to be at the core of it.”

COVID-19 Assessment Clinic at Wollongong Hospital

https://www.illawarramercury.com.au/story/6679611/covid-19-assessment-clinics-now-open-at-wollongong-hospital/?cs=17267

 COVID-19 Assessment Clinic at Wollongong Hospital.

The district’s public health director Curtis Gregory said the clinics will enable many people to be assessed without having to present to an emergency department.

“The clinic has been set up to help us respond to COVID-19, and channel patients away from the ED and other parts of the hospital,” he said.

“We are now in the targeted action phase (of our pandemic plan) and it’s focused on how we handle people coming into the system in the most efficient way so they can be tested and treated as quickly as possible.”

Mr Gregory said people did not require a GP referral to undergo testing at the clinic, but advised them to call ahead to minimise wait times.

People who had returned from overseas in the last 14 days, and most importantly, were showing fever and/or respiratory symptoms including cough, shortness of breath or sore throat were encouraged to attend the clinic.

“Close contacts of confirmed COVID-19 cases are also within the criteria for such testing,” he said.

The clinic is located at the back of Lawson House on the Wollongong Hospital campus. Entry to the clinic is via the dedicated parking and drop-off zone off Loftus Street, which is clearly sign posted.

The clinics will be staffed by specialist nursing and infection control staff and will operate from 8.30am to 5pm, 7 days a week. To book a time, phone 4222 5078.

The Wollongong COVID-19 Assessment Clinic started operating on Monday morning, with similar clinics to be established at Shellharbour and Shoalhaven Hospitals as required.

While the clinics are in operation, Wollongong’s Heart Health Centre will be temporarily relocated to Level 1 of Lawson House.

As part of its plan to deal with the threat of COVID-19, the Illawarra Shoalhaven Local Health District has also increased staffing district wide.

“We’re trying to flatten the curve – there’s a peak and we’re trying to reduce that peak, to reduce the effect on the health system,” Mr Gregory said.

He urged the public to remain alert to COVID-19 symptoms. The most up-to-date facts and advice on COVID-19 was available on the NSW Health website.

Criteria for COVID-19 Testing Clinics

  • Returned from overseas in the last 14 days AND showing acute respiratory symptoms (e.g. cough, shortness of breath, sore throat) and/or fever
  • Close contact of a person with a positive COVID-19 diagnosis

The best way to protect against COVID-19 is the same as any respiratory infection such as the flu:

  • Always practise good hygiene
  • Wash your hands often. Wash for at least 20 seconds with soap and water, or an alcohol-based hand rub
  • Cover your nose and mouth when coughing and sneezing with tissue or a flexed elbow
  • Avoid close contact with anyone with cold or flu-like symptoms
  • Stay home from work or school if you are sick

We have removed our paywall from our stories about the coronavirus. This is a rapidly changing situation and we to make sure our readers are as informed as possible. If you would like to support our journalists you can subscribe here.

Uta’s March 2020 Update

A few days ago my blogger friend Judith said: “Quarantine and self-isolation are words that chill me. I am one of those people who are out and about most days. The thought of being confined to the house scares me.”

Here is what I answered: I reckon self-isolation can be a good thing if you want to read and write more. I am sad that at present I cannot hug my loved ones. Self-isolation means, they cannot visit me at my home. I am with Peter, my husband, who is suffering from bladder cancer and a heart condition. When we need new supplies, they’ll be left at the door. It is a blessing though that we can still see all our children on the phone! Here in the Illawarra is perfect summer weather right now, and this is very enjoyable indeed. 🙂

These Movies I find interesting

There are several good movies Peter and I have been watching recently online. And there are some other films from this year’s Berlin Film Festival (Berlinale) that also do look quite interesting to me.

Set in the 1930s, ‘High Ground’ is inspired by true events. It goes back some 12 years to a massacre of an Indigenous tribe in Northern Australia. It says: “. . . the film explores the nature of loyalty and the ability to distinguish freely between right and wrong, in opposition to the dogmas of the age in which you live.”

“. . .  a father and daughter struggling with his dementia.”

This tale is set in present-day Berlin. A refugee is illegally crossing by boat from Africa to Europe.

The above three movies were shown at the Berlin Festival.

The following two movies I watched with Peter online. We both liked them very much!

81 year old Mr Stein (Pierre) gets a computer, and his life changes!

Pierre has heart trouble and often gets back pain. His daughter comes in to look after his needs. So there are some similarities to the way my 84 year old husband lives. The movie is set in Paris, which we loved! Alas, the computer gives Pierre a new lease of life . . .

There is something else in this movie that I find of special interest, namely how one of the characters in the movie struggles to become a writer, and how success beckons by interpreting the events in his own life and writing about it!

It is a love story even though the marriage breaks up!

This is a very interesting story about the break up of a marriage in America. I think the husband likes everything about his wife, and he very much loves their little son. But to the great disappointment and heartache of the wife, the husband is not exactly faithful anymore. Both have demanding jobs. They do not want to live together anymore. He works in New York, she works in Los Angeles. In the end they come out of a very expensive divorce  still being good friends and having good family relationships!

 

I want to copy here, a write-up about this very interesting father/daughter relationship in ‘The Roads not taken’.

Javier Bardem and Elle Fanning shine as a father and daughter struggling with his dementia

The Roads Not Taken

SOURCE: ADVENTURE PICTURES

‘THE ROADS NOT TAKEN’

Dir/scr: Sally Potter. UK. 2020. 85mins

The game we all play of wondering where we’d be if we’d taken different forks in life’s journey provides the narrative bedrock of Sally Potter’s new film, which pairs Javier Bardem and Elle Fanning as a dementia sufferer and his journalist daughter having a bad day in New York. But two bravura performances can’t disguise the thinness of a script that exposes just how uninteresting this ‘sliding doors’ game can be. The Roads Not Taken redeems itself, partly, through the compassion and sensitivity with which it deals with the mind-ravaging illness at its core.

 Sensitive, nuanced performances

High production values, including some fine, caressing camerawork by DoP Robbie Ryan, and the draw of the two leads (ably abetted by a couple of extended cameos from Salma Hayek and Laura Linney) will help The Road Not Taken find an audience on a world tour that begins when Bleecker Street release it in selected theatres Stateside starting on 13 March. It’s an awkward fit between the arthouse and commercial melodrama, and an out of competition slot may have served it better in Berlin. Skewing towards older viewers, Potter’s latest may turn out to lack box-office staying power.

Adapting its title from Robert Frost’s much-quoted poem ‘The Road Not Taken’, the film follows the lead of Still Alice in trying to convey a degenerative mental disorder (in this case frontotemporal dementia) from the inside. But The Roads Not Taken does more than adopt the point of view of Bardem’s Leo, who at the start of the film is seen staring into space in his unadorned Brooklyn apartment while his carer Xenia (Branka Katic) rings the doorbell and his daughter Molly (Fanning) desperately attempts to reach him by phone. It goes further, entering the mind of a man who outsiders (including a brusque optometrist) consider to be “not all there”.

Over the course of the film’s day, we watch as a loving but distressed Molly, wrangles her father to the dentist and to that optometrist, while simultaneously dealing with a work crisis over the phone, What should be a simple task becomes an ordeal punctuated by little incidents that befall the inarticulate, confused Leo – he wets himself, bangs his head, hugs a stranger’s dog in the supermarket. What Molly is not seeing, but we are, is where Leo goes when he’s not in the here and now. Today, it’s two places; a Greek island and some unspecified part of rural Mexico. We soon realise that these sequences spliced into the New York present are not flashbacks, but little imagined stories he’s playing on some sort of cerebral projector; stories about who he might have become if he had taken two of those other roads way back then.

Alas, this laudable attempt to show how intensely the light can still burn in the mind of a person who seems to be dimming is compromised by the overwrought melodrama of the Mexican story, in which Leo imagines what would have happened if he had stayed in his native country with his first love, the fiery Dolores (Salma Hayek), and the sheer weakness of the Greek strand, a nothing of a tale that sees a melancholy Leo meeting a young woman (Milena Tscarntke) who reminds him of the daughter he abandoned years before to pursue a career as a novelist. Leo’s imagination seems to tend to clichés – Mexican rooms done out in red ochres and sunflower yellows, a blue and white Greek beachside taverna just ready to be Instagrammed – and these alternative outcomes he drifts us off to are far less compelling, in the end, than the father and daughter story that is playing out in the real world.

With their sensitive, nuanced performances, Fanning and Bardem both lift a script that, in the hand of less able actors, would have risked coming across as a grotesquely sentimental. Ryan’s gentle handheld camera often homes in on their faces, blurring the background as if to convey the loneliness of each character’s ordeal, before pulling back to frame the two sharing, for example, a rare moment of mutual laughter. A string, keyboard and percussion soundtrack composed by Potter herself strikes an unexpectedly jaunty note at times, in a film that, for all its dark subject matter, is suffused by sunlight.

Production companies: Bleecker Street, Hanway Films, BFI, BBC Films

International sales: Hanway Films, info@hanwayfilms.com

Producer: Christopher Sheppard

Production design: Carlos Conti

Editing: Emilie Orsini, Sally Potter, Jason Rayton

Cinematography: Robbie Ryan

Music: Sally Potter

Main cast: Javier Bardem, Elle Fanning, Branka Katic, Milena Tscharntke, Laura Linney, Salma Hayek

 

All the videos and write-ups to these movies you can find here:

https://auntielive.wordpress.com/