Dear Frankie
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Dear Frankie | |
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UK movie poster |
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Directed by | Shona Auerbach |
Produced by | Caroline Wood Gillian Berrie Matthew T. Gannon |
Written by | Andrea Gibb |
Starring | Emily Mortimer Gerard Butler Jack McElhone Mary Riggans |
Music by | Alex Heffes |
Cinematography | Shona Auerbach |
Editing by | Oral Norrie Ottey |
Distributed by | Miramax Films |
Release date(s) | May 4, 2004 |
Running time | 105 min. |
Language | English British Sign Language |
IMDb profile |
Dear Frankie is a 2004 film directed by Shona Auerbach.
[edit] Cast
- Gerard Butler - The Stranger
- Emily Mortimer - Lizzie
- Jack McElhone - Frankie
- Mary Riggans - Nell
- Sharon Small - Marie
- Katy Murphy - Miss Mackenzie
- Jayd Johnson - Catriona
- Sophie Main - Serious Girl
- Sean Brown - Ricky Monroe
- Anna Hepburn - Headmistress
- Rony Bridges - Post Office Clerk
- Douglas Stewart Wallace - Stamp Shop Keeper
- Elaine M. Ellis - Librarian
- Carolyn Calder - Barmaid
- John Kazek - Ally
[edit] Plot
Nine-year-old Frankie Morrison (Jack McElhone) and his single mother Lizzie (Emily Mortimer) have been on the move ever since Frankie can remember, most recently arriving in a seaside Scottish town. Wanting to protect her son from the truth that they have run away from his father whose brutality caused Frankie to be deaf, Lizzie has invented a story that he is away at sea on the HMS Accra, not knowing there is really a ship with this name. Every few weeks, Lizzie writes to Frankie a make-believe letter from his father, telling of his adventures as a sailor in exotic lands, and Frankie tracks the ship's supposed progress around the globe. He discovers that it is due to dock in Glasgow, his latest hometown. With this real HMS Accra arriving in only a fortnight, a panicked Lizzie enlists the help of her friend and co-worker, Marie, to hire a stranger (Gerard Butler) to play Frankie's father, Davey, for just one day. Frankie and the stranger like each other so much that they both want to be together another day, with Lizzie joining them. Lizzie is first reluctant to allow that, but later agrees. At the end of that day, after saying goodbye with a slow dance and a kiss, she finds the money she paid the stranger, put back in her pocket.
Meanwhile the real Davey is dying. Lizzie visits him but refuses Davey's request to bring Frankie along because of Davey's abusive nature. Davey eventually dies, and Lizzie shows Frankie the obituary to explain why his 'father' will not return.
At the end of the movie, another letter sent by Frankie and collected by Lizzie reveals to her and to the audience that Frankie knows the man was not his real father, but that he appreciated the time they had together; it is suggested that the stranger will return and possibly continue his friendship with Frankie and his romance with Lizzie. (Marie tells Lizzie that the man was her brother.)
[edit] External links
- Official site
- Dear Frankie at the Internet Movie Database
- The Formula: What if you built a machine to predict hit movies? New Yorker article by Malcolm Gladwell, that discusses the effects that Dear Frankie has on one viewer, within a wider discussion of how films work.
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