Allelujah

Allelujah

202399 min
5.2/10
Drama

Plot Summary

When news of the closure of a small hospital's geriatric ward begins to reach the community, the hospital invites a local news crew to document their planning of a concert in honor of the hospital's most celebrated nurse. But there might be something more threatening to the hospital itself, more deadly than the politicians ready to shut down the place at a moment's notice.

▶️Watch Now

Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (38)

Jennifer Saunders

Jennifer Saunders

Sister Gilpin

Bally Gill

Bally Gill

Dr Valentine

David Bradley

David Bradley

Joe Colman

Russell Tovey

Russell Tovey

Colin Colman

Derek Jacobi

Derek Jacobi

Ambrose

Judi Dench

Judi Dench

Mary

No Image

JP Conway

Kieran

No Image

Jesse Akele

Nurse Pinkney

Lorraine Ashbourne

Lorraine Ashbourne

Mrs Earnshaw

No Image

Nivedita Bhargava

Mother

Nicholas Burns

Nicholas Burns

Minister

Paul Butterworth

Paul Butterworth

Richard

🎬Crew

Director

Richard Eyre

Writers

Heidi Thomas, Alan Bennett

Producers

Damian Jones, Kevin Loader, Cameron McCracken, Jenny Borgars, Rose Garnett

🖼️Gallery (4 images)

Allelujah backdrop 1
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🏷️Keywords

gay theme

💬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

3/26/2023

When a small geriatric hospital in Northern England is threatened with closure, the staff and patients rally together to try and save it. There might be a glimmer of hope with this task as the government consultant tasked with the final evaluation - "Colin" (Russell Tovey) has his estranged father " Joe" (David Bradley) in that self same facility. The place is run under the benignly imperious hand of "Sister Gilpin" (Jennifer Saunders) with Bally Gill's "Dr. Valentine" tending to their clinical needs. As you'd expect with Alan Bennett, this comes at you from the left of the political spectrum, and highlights what he sees as the short-termism of fiscally based decision making. To that end, Sir Richard Eyre has assembled a strong cast of formidable character actors to portray the patients. Most notable amongst them, for me, was Julia McKenzie and Bradley is also on great form as the curmudgeonly old gent coming to terms with his predicament and his successful, gay, son. There is plenty of dry humour, observational sarcasm to the fore and Saunders and Gill have quite a nice chemistry between them as they both strive to care for their elderly charges. I can't say that I loved the ending. It is thought provoking, but somehow seemed just a little over-dramatic and unnecessary. That said, though, the ensemble cast reminded me very much "Quartet" (2012) with strong leading characters and familiar faces at every turn helping to highlight the serious (and lighter) issues of the ageing process for both the older folks and for those charged with keeping them well. Not sure it really needs a cinema to enjoy, but it's still well worth ninety minutes.

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Production Companies

BBC Film
Ingenious Media
DJ Films