Like a good wine, THE FAMILY WAY actually improves with age and like the afforesaid wine, leaves you with a nice glow at the end in a way that films of today seldom do. Originally seen on British cinema screens early in 1967, this Bill (Alfie) Naughton scripted affair was one of the many excellent films produced by the Boulting Brothers and it was very much a film of the 60s breakthrough period with its frank, but sensitively handled, central theme of impotence. The story of a young couple's bid to get their marriage right after a disastrous wedding night is warm, touching and very funny in places with excellent performances from a stock British cast that includes Wilfrid Pickles, Barry Foster, Liz Fraser, Murray Head, John Comer and Hywel Bennett and a grown up Hayley Mills as the couple. The best lines however are from John Mills as the archetypal Northern male whose inability to grasp the problems going on around him make this his finest character acting hour. Thespian honours are stolen by Marjorie Rhodes as his long suffering wife who makes us laugh then makes us cry and makes us think. Beautifully shot in a way that captures the grit and charm of the North Country and with music by Paul McCartney - this is definitely one to spend an evening at home with. TRIVIA POINT - Look out for Windsor (It Ain't Half Hot) Davies getting one line in a crowd scene