Lucky choosing to not tell her, letting his daughter continue to grow up in the existing environment, but becoming part of her life. It's a beautiful ending, perhaps a bit overly sentimentally draining, but good.
3 Reviews
Day Eight
Prismark1011 September 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Lucky arrives home and gets to see his dying mother. However there are tensions with his brother and the reasons are clear.
Lucky is the actual father of the daughter that his brother is raising. The product of a fling Lucky had with his brother's wife.
This was hinted at throughout the series and is why Lucky left home and never returned.
The piano that Lucky has transported throughout the series brings the family closer. For Meg she gets her own family reunion.
Predictably though there is are a lot of arguments with Lucky right in the centre of it all. However there is some sweetness as well as the family bonds holding strong.
The show was held together by a remarkable performance from Milly Alcock as Meg. Although looking back at it, this could had been a good two hours comedy drama.
Lucky is the actual father of the daughter that his brother is raising. The product of a fling Lucky had with his brother's wife.
This was hinted at throughout the series and is why Lucky left home and never returned.
The piano that Lucky has transported throughout the series brings the family closer. For Meg she gets her own family reunion.
Predictably though there is are a lot of arguments with Lucky right in the centre of it all. However there is some sweetness as well as the family bonds holding strong.
The show was held together by a remarkable performance from Milly Alcock as Meg. Although looking back at it, this could had been a good two hours comedy drama.
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