The Etruscan Smile
Inspire Me
•
1h 47m
Rory MacNeil has spent his whole life being proud, stubborn, and emotionally unavailable. Then he has to move in with his estranged son in San Francisco for medical treatment, and everything he built his identity around starts to crack. In the best possible way. Brian Cox (Succession, Braveheart) delivers a quietly devastating performance as a man learning to love late. The Etruscan Smile is funny, tender, and surprisingly gut-punching, proof that it's never too late to let people in, and that the most unexpected connections hit the hardest.
Why This Film Matters: Loneliness among the elderly has reached epidemic proportions, and estrangement between generations is a quiet crisis that rarely makes headlines. The Etruscan Smile puts that reality front and center, showing the cost of emotional unavailability not just to the people around us but to ourselves. It also speaks to how societies that worship productivity and youth tend to push older people to the margins, and what gets lost when we stop making space for them. In a culture obsessed with reinvention and the new, this film is a gentle but firm reminder that older people still have things to learn, give, and become.