Peter McVurrich (Robert Urquhart) and Kitty McVurrich (Edith MacArthur) are a couple who leave their farm in the Isle of Skye to visit their children.
Peter was a sailor who travelled the world while Kitty stayed at home to raise her children.
Their first port of call is Glasgow. Iain is a police officer and his wife might be having a fling with his colleague. She is also not comfortable with her in laws staying with them.
They then visit their daughter Fiona in Liverpool. She has money problems having to work as a masseuse to make ends meet.
In Peterborough their son Roddie is a technocrat with a vision of a future that was not that far wrong.
Down in London, daughter Deirdre is married to a wealthy financier who puts them up in a suite at a hotel with all expenses paid. Whereas their other daughter Mairi is aghast that Deirdre would not put her parents up for a few nights at their mansion.
It is a final journey for Kitty, she is dying of cancer and she wants to see her children for a final time. In turn the couple experience the changing face of 1990s Britain in both socio-economic terms. Peter and Kitty just suddenly turn up, they wrote a letter that they would be arriving to stay. Not even a phone call.
In Glasgow the children and grandchildren seemed oblivious, Iain unable to even say goodbye to his mother. In Liverpool the family is deep in debt whereas Deirdre has no money issues at all.
At its heart this is a bittersweet and poignant story. Even though Peter is from Skye he is a man of the world, he can greet people in other languages. There is a nice moment where he play roulette to make the night at a hotel to be little more swanky.
Even Kitty is more understanding of Fiona's predicament to make ends meet. It allows her to ask Peter whether he ever strayed. The experience of travelling the country brings both of them together despite the apathy of some of their offsprings.
Writer John McGrath was inspired to write this personal piece after the death of his parents. It also has similarities to Tokyo Story.