It’s genuinely a trip to see the "Seven Up" kids as grandparents. There is something so profoundly moving—and occasionally heartbreaking—about watching these lives unfold in ten-minute chunks every seven years.
At this stage, the flashiness of youth is totally gone, replaced by a quiet, weary resilience. It’s less about "who they become" now and more about how they’ve handled what life threw at them. Michael Apted’s project remains one of the most ambitious things ever put on film. A bit repetitive in spots because of the recaps, but still an incredible look at the passage of time.
It’s genuinely a trip to see the "Seven Up" kids as grandparents. There is something so profoundly moving—and occasionally heartbreaking—about watching these lives unfold in ten-minute chunks every seven years.
At this stage, the flashiness of youth is totally gone, replaced by a quiet, weary resilience. It’s less about "who they become" now and more about how they’ve handled what life threw at them. Michael Apted’s project remains one of the most ambitious things ever put on film. A bit repetitive in spots because of the recaps, but still an incredible look at the passage of time.