Very Annie Mary

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Very Annie Mary-anne
Directed by Sara Sugarman
Produced by Graham Broadbent
Damian Jones
Written by Sara Sugarman
Starring Rachel Griffiths
Jonathan Pryce
Ioan Gruffudd
Matthew Rhys
Joanna Page
Music by Stephen Warbeck
Cinematography Barry Ackroyd[1]
Editing by Robin Sales
Distributed by FilmFour
Release dates 25 May 2001
Running time 104 min.[2]
Country Wales
Language English
Box office $46,352

Very Annie Mary is a 2001 comedy film and musical from the United Kingdom, written and directed by Sara Sugarman and starring Rachel Griffiths and Jonathan Pryce. It is a coming-of-age tale, set in south Wales, about a woman in her 30s who lives with her verbally abusive father. It was filmed on location in Bridgend and at Workingman's Institute and Memorial Hall, Newbridge, Wales.

Plot

After her father suffers a stroke, a woman is forced to take care of him but uses the circumstances to emancipate herself and find the courage to sing once again.[3]

Cast

Music

The film features the following songs:[4]

Production

The film was shot in summer 1999, with filming taking place in the Garw Valley in Bridgend, Wales, posing as the fictional village of "Ogw" (a play on the name of the Ogmore Valley's Welsh name of Ogwr). It was scheduled to be presented at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival and the Dinard Festival of British Cinema but failed to show at either event.[5]

Reception

Variety magazine called it a "half-klutzy, half-engaging eccentric comedy...bolstered by good turns from leads Rachel Griffiths and Jonathan Pryce" but "falling prey to a general disorganization in tone and structure.[5] The Guardian called it "a broad comedy with a very derivative Monty-ish plot, but likeable and good-natured."[6] The New York Times called the film "alternately mushy and farcical" with an "undertone of satire" that keeps the film from "choking on its own cuteness"; it "churns up a few genuinely funny bits" including a climax "that is almost worth waiting for."[7]

References

  1. Credits for Very Annie Mary from the BFI Film & TV Database
  2. Release summary from the BFI Film & TV Database
  3. Very Annie Mary Overview from The Guardian
  4. Music from Very Annie Mary according to the BFI Film & TV Database
  5. 5.0 5.1 Very Annie-Mary (U.K. - France) from Variety
  6. Review of Very Annie Mary from The Guardian
  7. Movie Review: Very Annie Mary, a March 29, 2002 review from The New York Times by Stephen Holden

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.