Mother's Pride review: Like an inoffensive light ale, slips down more pleasantly than you might expect ...Middle East

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It’s not hard to see why. Mick is still grief-stricken over the loss of his wife. Living with son Jake (James Buckley), a single parent, he’s also cut up about the disappearance of his other son Cal (Jonno Davies), who took off to become a musician and never even returned for his mother’s funeral. But this failed pop star with just one hit to his name, ‘Guiding Light’, now returns, broke and with his tail between his legs. Mick hardly welcomes him with open arms.

With bills mounting up and the bailiffs hovering, the pub is facing repossession – until Cal takes it upon himself to dive into his grandfather’s recipe book and start concocting a mild ale. “Brewing’s in our blood,” he says, and despite an early cock-up – way too much sugar in the mix gives them all a blinding hangover – they come up with a brew that might yet save the pub. The plan is to enter it into a regional competition before heading to the finals in London, in the hope that a high-profile win might give the pub a blaze of much-needed publicity.

Still, Moorcroft casts this cosy charmer with some familiar faces: Mark Addy as a barfly; Whose Line Is It Anyway? staple Josie Lawrence as a saucy local; and Luke Treadaway, as rival brewer Pritchard, whose family owns a string of pubs and is the two-time winner of the brewing competition that The Drovers Arms is entering. Then there’s Gabriella Wilde as schoolteacher Abi, the local girl left behind by Cal, who has since hooked up with Prichard, against her better judgement.

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Along the way, there are some amusing scenes, especially when Addy’s Paxman and Buckley’s Jake go Morris Dancing to ’70s funk like ‘Daddy Cool’ and ‘DISCO’, and Moorcroft even manages to shoehorn in a nod to how many pubs are closing down every month in Britain, suggesting we guard against old traditions from disappearing and being swallowed up by corporate greed. Like an inoffensive light ale, the result slips down more pleasantly than you might expect.

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