The Last Bus review – going nowhere fast with Timothy Spall

Spall plays a widower taking his wife’s ashes the length of Britain by bus in this lumbering drama

In this plodding road-trip movie, ailing pensioner Tom Harper (Timothy Spall, all slurred speech and shuffling gait) makes the most of his freedom pass and travels, by bus, from his home in John O’Groats to Land’s End to scatter his late wife’s ashes. Flashbacks to the early days of their marriage in the 1950s add context, but slow the already unhurried pace.

The journey is a nice excuse to paint Tom into a cheerily cosmopolitan portrait of the UK. His attitude is less parochial than his remote homeland might suggest, as seen when he steps in to help a Muslim woman who is being racially abused by another passenger. Later, he’s picked up from the side of the road by a group of friendly Ukrainians and taken to a party, though he’s not quite daring enough to try their pierogi, which he politely slides back on to the platter.

Watch a trailer for The Last Bus.

Contributor

Simran Hans

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
It Snows in Benidorm review – Timothy Spall is the bright spot in overcast drama
Spall plays an amateur meteorologist searching for his missing brother on the Costa Blanca in Isabel Croixet’s glacial mood piece

Wendy Ide

04, Sep, 2022 @11:00 AM

Article image
Denial review – tense, real-life courtroom drama
Rachel Weisz and Timothy Spall star in this dramatisation of the libel case between historian Deborah Lipstadt and Holocaust denier David Irving

Wendy Ide

29, Jan, 2017 @8:00 AM

Article image
The film that changed my life: Timothy Spall

Actor Timothy Spall on how Powell and Pressburger's masterpiece of fantasy changed his perception of cinema

Interview by Jessica Hopkins

20, Mar, 2011 @12:02 AM

Article image
Mrs Lowry & Son review – a prim portrait of the artist
A ponderous study of the artist’s relationship with his mother

Wendy Ide

01, Sep, 2019 @7:00 AM

Article image
Gassed Up review – generic moped crime drama goes nowhere fast
British director George Amponsah delivers action mayhem and a telegraphed plot in this ill-timed tale of thieves on two wheels

Wendy Ide

11, Feb, 2024 @12:00 PM

Article image
The Last Bus review – a cliche-packed vehicle for Timothy Spall
A widower takes a nostalgic journey from John o’Groats to Land’s End using his free bus pass in a well-acted but overly sentimental film

Peter Bradshaw

26, Aug, 2021 @10:00 AM

Article image
Timothy Spall: ‘the brutal, sinister world of my comedy heroes’
The actor’s new film – Stanley, A Man of Variety – echoes David Lynch and a dark Ealing classic. Here he tells why he chose to re-create the giants of music hall as ‘English noir’

Vanessa Thorpe Arts and media correspondent

26, May, 2018 @1:00 PM

Article image
Nowhere Special review – a tender tale of fatherhood
James Norton gives a subtly powerful performance as a single parent facing terminal illness

Simran Hans

17, Jul, 2021 @2:00 PM

Article image
The Party review – the dinner bash from hell
A politician’s soiree quickly descends into farce in Sally Potter’s star-laden satire, a sharply observed study of love and politics

Mark Kermode, Observer film critic

15, Oct, 2017 @7:59 AM

Article image
The Founder review – bland fast-food biopic
Michael Keaton stars as Ray Kroc, the man who turned McDonald’s into a global force, but this is flavourless stuff

Simran Hans

19, Feb, 2017 @8:00 AM