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Wild Mountain Thyme: The Irish feel good you didn't know you needed. (I hope.)

  • aligeorgia11
  • Nov 11, 2020
  • 2 min read



I woke up this morning tired and not realising that the thing I needed the most more then sleep and coffee was an Irish rom-com, rather questionable Irish accents and Jamie Doran with massive sideburns and a grey streak.



I am not Irish as you may or may not know but even I can't help but think this is a little much, but then again... maybe this is why I love it so much? I got 2005 Pride and Prejudice mixed with cows, rain and the Irish countryside of p.s I love you that we all fell stupidly in love with. Yes, that's it, it's simple. Its the Irish countryside and the sound of Gaelic music which I think even if this film is not the best, will more then likely cause me to come out of watching it feeling happy and fighting the urge to get a train to the middle of nowhere for some alone time in a cottage, (secretly with the hope that a farmer who looks like or is Jamie Doran will fall in love with me.) Following the budding romance of Rosemary (Emily Blunt) and Anthony (Jamie Dornan) adapted from the play written by director John Patrick Shanley (yes that guy the guy that wrote Moonstruck, the 1987 infamous Cher and Nicolas cage film) right here and now I think it is safe to say this is going to go one of two ways, I won't say good or bad as then I feel those assumptions always make them go bad, but for me, it's currently sitting in the grey area of simply having no idea how this will turn out. My rom-com heart wants and needs this to become a hidden gem of a feel-good film, I have a lot riding on the discovery of this trailer and those side-burns. But mostly on the sideburns.




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