The scenes between Jack Lemmon and Sarah Paulson make The Long Way Home
something special. This Hallmark Channel TV film explores the problems of old
age when you feel you have no purpose any more.
Lemmon is playing someone in his own age bracket, a 70 something widower who
went to war in World War II, married a hometown sweetheart and raised a family.
Now he lives with one of his sons Garwin Sanford and Kristin Griffith and they
fuss over him like he's an invalid.
He's hardly that, in fact he was a cabinetmaker an honorable craft which he was employed at for almost half a century. Lemmon looks like a man who took pride in his work.
One day when the circus comes to town he plays hooky. He meets Sarah
Paulson a girl who is traveling west to rejoin her parents in California. The
two of them just hit it off, he's the grandfather she never had. Lemmon and
Paulson decide to journey together, Lemmon to meet up with an old girlfriend
Betty Garrett, a widow who lives near Paulson's parents.
Lemmon and Garrett have a wonderful reunion scene. Lemmon's in Kansas and she's in California. Geography is against them in the romance department, but it's not insurmountable.
Lemmon also learns quite a life lesson from meeting Paulson's parents, especially her father. As that immortal 20th century philosopher Yogi Berra
put it, it ain't over till it's over.
The Long Way Home is a wonderful duel character study and inspiring, especially to an old codger like me.