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- Columnist: Neil Morrison https://twitter.com/NeilMorrison87 - Resume: MotoGP reporter, Moto2/3 commentator, host the @PaddockPassPod Frank Cottrell Boyce.
2018.
A detective fantasy / family drama where a love of words helps a father reconnect with a missing son.
audience score=1196 Votes.
Sam Riley.
Box office poison.
0% bad words.
Question 1 is:never question 2 is:sometimes question 3 is:sometimes question 4 is:sometimes question 5 is:never question 6 is :always question 7 is:never question 8 is:sometimes question 9 is:always question 10 is:usually.
YouTube.
Wow. this is. something.
Sometimes, always, never. If you’re a man wearing a three-button blazer, those are the only three words you need to know. The middle button should always be fastened. The top button is up to you. But the bottom button? Don’t even think about it.
But where did this fashion edict originate? In the grand scheme of things, it’s a rather new rule. Over a century ago, there were no hard-and-fast buttoning guidelines. Some jackets had five or more buttons, and you could fasten them in any combination you pleased. That all changed when England’s King Edward VII—then the Prince of Wales—started growing a belly in the late 19th century.
Edward liked to eat. A lot. On a typical day, he’d mow down a plateful of bacon and eggs for breakfast, a tower of roast beef and shortcakes for lunch, and a 12-course dinner. A 48-inch waist—the same bulge Henry VIII flaunted when he first sat on the throne—was a little too big for the future king to handle. Edward grew so quickly that he couldn’t fasten his waistcoat’s bottom button. Deciding that he liked the look, he kept it unbuttoned.
In an age before models and TV stars, royals like Edward influenced most fashion crazes. So when Edward kept that bottom button undone, people noticed. A trend caught on, and men of all sizes have been leaving that bottom button open ever since. Nowadays, blazers are designed to keep that bottom button undone. Buttoning it can cause a well-fitted jacket to tighten too closely, making it uncomfortable and unsightly. So although the rule has arbitrary origins, over the years it has become both practical and fashionable.
Incidentally, this isn’t the only fashion trend Edward started. You can thank him for the tuxedo, too! When Edward was still a prince, he wanted a slightly more casual alternative to the extremely formal dinner attire of the day. He opted for a blue jacket, black trousers, and a bowtie. In 1886, his American friend James Brown Potter brought the style to Tuxedo Park, NY, from which it has spread to wedding parties and proms everywhere.
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It's impossible to navigate virtually any kind of retail store in February without seeing displays of pink and red chocolate boxes around every corner. Chocolate has become a standard Valentine's Day gift, right up there with flowers and jewelry, but the treat didn't develop its romantic reputation overnight. It took centuries of myths, marketing, and traditions to write chocolate into Valentine's Day history.
The first people to connect love and chocolate were the Mayans. They started brewing drinks made from cocoa beans around 500 BCE —centuries before the first Feast of St. Valentine. This early hot chocolate was an important part of Mayan wedding rituals. The bride and groom would exchange sips of the beverage during the ceremony, foreshadowing chocolate's future status as a universal expression of love.
The Aztecs had a less wholesome view of the ingredient. According to legend, the emperor Montezuma II binged huge quantities of cocoa beans to fuel his romantic affairs. Chocolate does contain small amounts of tryptophan and phenylethylamine, two chemicals associated with feelings love and desire, but scientists say there isn't enough of either substance to make chocolate a strong aphrodisiac.
Stories of chocolate's effects in the bedroom persisted nonetheless, which might explain why candy-sellers embraced the sweet treats when Valentine's Day became popular. Cadbury debuted the first heart-shaped box of chocolates in 1861, and it was an instant success. The package was embellished with cupids and roses to appeal to customers shopping for Valentine's Day gifts. And once the box was empty, it could be used to store keepsakes like love letters and locks of hair.
Cadbury didn't patent the heart-shaped chocolate box, so the rest of the candy industry started manufacturing similar packaging of their own. It wasn't long before chocolates became synonymous with the newly-commercialized holiday.
Valentine's Day chocolates are exchanged around the world, but they're attached to interesting traditions in some countries. Thanks to a successful marketing campaign, women in Japan have to give "obligation chocolates" to all the men they know on February 14. Here are more international Valentine's Day customs.
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Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
On February 26, you might see a few people going about their normal business with black, cross-shaped smudges on their foreheads. That’s because it’s Ash Wednesday, when Christian churches across the world mark the beginning of Lent by anointing each member of the congregation with an ashen cross. Considering that millions of Christians participate in the tradition, those ashes definitely add up.
So where do churches get them? As Reader’s Digest reports, the answer is related to another Christian observance: Palm Sunday. Each year, churches hold a special Mass on the Sunday before Easter to commemorate the day Jesus arrived in Jerusalem before his crucifixion. In the Bible, a crowd of worshippers welcomed him by waving palm fronds as he rode into the city on a donkey—so, on Palm Sunday, churches hand out palm fronds to their members. (The palms, according to TIME, are purchased from suppliers based in locations with tropical or subtropical climates. )
While some people twist their dried palms into the shape of a cross and take them home, most are left in the church and later burned. The ashes from that fire are stored and used on Ash Wednesday the following year.
Unlike the tradition of passing out palm fronds, the practice of blessing churchgoers in ash isn’t directly linked to the Bible. Instead, it’s a symbolic way to remind Christians of their own mortality. When a member of the clergy marks your head in ash, they’ll often say, “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return, ” which is what God told Adam when he banished him from the Garden of Eden.
For more on the meaning and history of Ash Wednesday, check out these facts.
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Summary:
Alan is a stylish tailor with moves as sharp as his suits. But he's spent years searching tirelessly for his missing son, Michael, who stormed out over a game of Scrabble. With a body to identify and his family torn apart, Alan must repair the relationship with his youngest son and identify an online player who he thinks could be Michael, Alan is a stylish tailor with moves as sharp as his suits. With a body to identify and his family torn apart, Alan must repair the relationship with his youngest son and identify an online player who he thinks could be Michael, so he can finally move on and reunite his family. … Expand
Genre(s):
Drama, Mystery, Comedy
Rating:
PG-13
Runtime:
91 min.
Thanks its so easy with you.
Young Jordan: Damn girl. Looking like Cookie from Empire.
Thanks teacher.
One last time to see the twins before they head south.
Y'all realize if abortion is abolished we'd go back to the time when hangers were used and women went to hotel rooms and basements to get abortions or y'all don't want to talk about that.
Woohoo! ASL.
It reminds me all of my happy yesterdays.
*watches this trailer and hears the song Me:mom i want to go to church.
I thought this movie already came out. Ohh I'm getting excited. 🤠
It's like driving miss daisy in reverse.
Imagine hitting your head and then EVERYONE ELSE gets amnesia…
Just here for the cringey christian comments.
Holy Jesus What a train wreck
Is this movie a new version of Morning Glory starring Rachel McAdams.
L sometimes wach your videos.
Bohemian Rhapsody won the oscars Yesterday joined the chat Rocketman joined the chat.
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Edit
Storyline
Alan is a stylish tailor with moves as sharp as his suits. He has spent years searching tirelessly for his missing son Michael who stormed out over a game of scrabble. With a body to identify and his family torn apart, Alan must repair the relationship with his youngest son Peter and solve the mystery of an online player who he thinks could be Michael, so he can finally move on and reunite his family.
Plot Summary
Add Synopsis
Taglines:
His son is missing, his family is lost but his dress sense is immaculate.
See more »
Details
Release Date: 14 June 2019 (UK)
Also Known As: Triple Word Score
Box Office
Cumulative Worldwide Gross: $1, 377, 856
See more on IMDbPro »
Company Credits
Technical Specs
See full technical specs »
Did You Know?
Trivia
The title refers to the Sometimes, Always, Never Three-Button Rule. When wearing a suit with three buttons a man should sometimes button the top button, depending on the style of the suit, always button the middle button, and never button the bottom button. See more »
Goofs
This movie takes places in the UK; UK Scrabble players will note the following inaccuracies: A character in the movie says that there are 101 two-letters words playable in Scrabble, but the UK list of playable Scrabble words has had 120 or more two-letter words since at least 2003. There was a time when the North Amercan list of playable Scrabble words had exactly 101 playable two-letter words; it is now up to 107. (The UK list is up to 127. ) (Side note: ZO is playable in the UK but not in North America. ) The term "bingo" for playing all seven letters on one's rack in one term is primarily a North American usage; "bonus" is used more often in the UK. See more »
Quotes
Alan:
[ Referring to the buttons of a suit jacket, from top to bottom]
What you have to remember about these is: sometimes, always, never.
See more »
Soundtracks
Sometimes Always Never
Written by Edwyn Collins and Sean Read
Performed by Edwyn Collins, Sean Read and Chay Heney See more ».
Ok Billy nighy. My idol soo im gonna watch this
Are you ever the cause of your own problems.
That chanel is the best.
4 /
5 stars
4 out of 5 stars.
The veteran actor shines as an ageing word wizard searching for his estranged son in Carl Hunter’s kind-hearted debut
Beguiling Englishness … Bill Nighy in Sometimes Always Never.
T here’s a beguiling Englishness to this elegant, offbeat comedy-drama, terrifically written by Frank Cottrell-Boyce and directed by feature debutant Carl Hunter. It has a wonderful syncopation in its writerly rhythm and narrative surprises. The film positively twinkles with insouciance, and is performed with aplomb, particularly by Bill Nighy, who brings a droll sprightliness and deadpan wit to the lead part, but shows how these mannerisms mask emotional pain. Sam Riley is excellent as the character’s long-suffering son.
Nighy plays Alan, a retired Merseyside tailor – and Nighy nails an engaging and consistent voice, sounding like a kind of donnish Ringo Starr. The actor shows how his character, a formidable and quietly intelligent man, has retreated into his habits and eccentricities to shield himself from the cares of the world. Long ago, Alan’s favourite son left home, never to return. In the decades since, Alan has searched for him, a quest that has sparked mixed feelings in the heart of his other, now grownup son Peter (Riley) who feels that he was always second-best.
Watch the trailer for Sometimes Always Never
But Alan has fixated on one thing in particular: the fact that his son stormed out over an ostensible argument over Scrabble, and whether the two-letter word “Zo” was admissible. Now Alan is obsessed with Scrabble; he is a grandmaster, a black-belt, even hustling unsuspecting players he meets in B&Bs – a funny and unexpected interlude with a couple played by Tim McInnerny and Jenny Agutter. But while staying with Peter, his wife Sue (Alice Lowe) and their withdrawn teen son Jack (Louis Healy), things reach a crisis. Playing Scrabble online, Alan encounters a virtual opponent whose style he recognises – and who deploys the controversial word “Zo”. Is someone trying to get in touch?
The Scrabble and Scrabble-obsession are emblems of a complex sort of communication crisis. Alan’s mastery of the game has taken him along a certain type of loneliness spectrum. He is simultaneously very good with words and absolutely terrible with them. He can’t make contact with Peter and Peter can’t make contact with him.
And yet, Alan has far from given up on life: to Peter’s exasperation and dismay, he continues to be an assertive personality, airily dapper, liking everything just so in ways that can’t simply be written off as dysfunctional. He has a positive effect on Jack, showing him the correct way to wear a suit (the title refers to the jacket’s three buttons, top, middle, bottom, and which may be done up). The “tailoring-mentoring” scenes here incidentally have a thousand times more wit and humanity than those in the boorish Kingsman films.
Riley, Lowe, McInnerny and Agutter are all superb in their roles and the Scrabble face-off with McInnerny in an early scene – together with its highly surprising second encounter the following morning – is carried off with wit and flair. This film is a distinct, articulate pleasure.
Love this we have so many talented great kids In our community. I'm also so happy she's the youngest EP and owner of a production company. GENIUS PRODUCTION COMPANY. I also love her concept of wanting too hire main people Melanated people too play main roles and be behind the scenes. Love it.
Very important.
Love it.
The last part kinda made me cry.
Im a guy and i cried while watching this. This is how sad it went.
Kelly and Holly. oh my an Office reunion.
I thought the actress was ASMR darling.
Its about time they gave Regina her own movie cause she's hella funny.
Huh-lariious! Here! Take my money! Im gettin me a seat to this! 😂.
The story writer actually thought it actually happened to the beatles.