As far as the dialogue goes, it's very dry, cause it came from a book of the same name and they had to adapt it. Other than that, I think it wasn't faithful adaptian of the bulk into a movie. About getting old and accepting what it means. To be at the backside of life. What it means to deal with? How do you accept the thing that you can't control? Hmm, being angry about that, and how are you independent to take it away. The people in your life that mean the most and living every day like it is your last even on an island that that is having invasion at the eighties come in and uh, yeah, Maine Summer Tourist. How to accept the inevitable?
You know that the old guard that lived through turn at the century, probation, the great depression, war war II, through the fifties, the sixties, the seventies, and now the backside of the eighties, and at the backside of their eighties, we're dealing with the acceptance of its time to go into that good night. It's a film i want to get into it sad that it ends yes, it's as if you're saying Goodbye to beloved, it's a relative that you don't want to see go. Did you know that's the last time you see them? That's how it makes you feel. Tell these characters and that's what it means. Make it so enduring for 1987 and a book adaptation.