Best Interests
- TV Series
- 2023
Follows a family driven apart by having to make choices no parent would ever want to make.Follows a family driven apart by having to make choices no parent would ever want to make.Follows a family driven apart by having to make choices no parent would ever want to make.
- Nominated for 2 BAFTA Awards
- 2 wins & 4 nominations total
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I'm a single guy with no kids so there's no way I could ever truly empathise with these parents.
What I can comment on though is how incredibly well the core characters have been crafted, warts and all. I found myself swinging from loathing Sharon Horgan's character to rooting for her and her unrelenting quest. She is not a martyr though. She is flawed - like all of us - and her character can be so polarising at times. However, at the core is a truly brilliant performance. Michael Sheen is great as always and T'nia Miller (uncredited???) continues to show her brilliant acting chops. I'm obsessed with her charismatic performances.
What I loved most about this limited series is the fact that sometimes we, as the audience, are not meant to view in black and white but instead feel squeamish, sympathise,, hurt deep in the gut, be angered and unsettled, take sides, lose faith in those sides, reposition our own compass and, at the end, leave with soulful wonderings after the credits roll. This is what top class storytelling is all about.
It's not a 10 for me but damn, this is fine viewing.
What I can comment on though is how incredibly well the core characters have been crafted, warts and all. I found myself swinging from loathing Sharon Horgan's character to rooting for her and her unrelenting quest. She is not a martyr though. She is flawed - like all of us - and her character can be so polarising at times. However, at the core is a truly brilliant performance. Michael Sheen is great as always and T'nia Miller (uncredited???) continues to show her brilliant acting chops. I'm obsessed with her charismatic performances.
What I loved most about this limited series is the fact that sometimes we, as the audience, are not meant to view in black and white but instead feel squeamish, sympathise,, hurt deep in the gut, be angered and unsettled, take sides, lose faith in those sides, reposition our own compass and, at the end, leave with soulful wonderings after the credits roll. This is what top class storytelling is all about.
It's not a 10 for me but damn, this is fine viewing.
Would it have been possible for the mom's hair to ever look like she was a normal person? She almost always looked like her hair had just been brushed and combed throughout the whole show and make her look unreal and sort of plastic. Everybody else looked real like they usually do in British television. But Michael Sheen as usual was the best. You completely forget that he's Michael Sheen. He just sort of melts into the character. I liked the actress who plays the mom much better in Bad Sisters than in this show. She was just sort of one note in this one. But the show does a pretty good job of just showing how everybody gets completely effed up by these tragic family situations.
I enjoyed Best Interests, similar in storyline to The Children Act. Thought provoking, emotional, hard to watch at times, but being the BBC, it has to include every minority in a small community which makes it a bit ridiculous. The father is realistic, and likeable but the mother is the irrational and blind sided parent who is convinced everyone is out to kill her daughter, not considering her "best interests".
It really opens your eyes to the challenges faced by families with a terminally ill child. There really is never any break or respite and puts massive strain on all the family relationships.
Michael Sheen is TREMENDOUS.
It really opens your eyes to the challenges faced by families with a terminally ill child. There really is never any break or respite and puts massive strain on all the family relationships.
Michael Sheen is TREMENDOUS.
A powerful and heartbreaking drama, the only reason I could advise against seeing it is that it might break your heart. Sharon Horgan is excellent and Alison Oliver and Niamh Moriarty are no less. Michael Sheen is simply superlative, his performance is devastating, he managed to make me cry with disarming ease. Honestly, considering they've never nominated a national treasure like David Tennant until this year's very ill-conceived nomination, I already knew that the Bafta is to cinema what McDonald's is to fine dining, but not nominating Sheen while nominating the series and Horgan for this role, it's truly a public statement of utter obtuseness.
Sharon Horgan and Michael Sheen play the parents of a child who, after a lifetime of illness is on life support in the hospital and have a massive disagreement as to how her future should be managed.
Jack Thorne wrote it and as always, he capturers the emotions and anguish of the conflicted parents in all its pain and desperation.
I admit to crying many times, wondering how I would react to such a life changing challenge as in what they are faced with.
The couple are torn apart as their older daughter handles the while situation in a dangerous way herself, with her unknowing parents caught up in their younger daughter's precarious health.
Riveting film, brilliantly acted.
Recommend.
8/10.
Jack Thorne wrote it and as always, he capturers the emotions and anguish of the conflicted parents in all its pain and desperation.
I admit to crying many times, wondering how I would react to such a life changing challenge as in what they are faced with.
The couple are torn apart as their older daughter handles the while situation in a dangerous way herself, with her unknowing parents caught up in their younger daughter's precarious health.
Riveting film, brilliantly acted.
Recommend.
8/10.
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