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Dear Frankie on DVD (2004)

Dear Frankie cover art
Average rating: (73%)
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3.5
 
Starring: Emily Mortimer | Gerard Butler | Jack McElhone
Director: Shona Auerbach
Studio: PATHE DISTRIBUTION
Run time: 85 mins
Certificate: 12
User collections: 12 Recommended Must Sees!! | Best Of the Best | The ones I go back to again and again | Best Of British. | My Fave British Films | Films to see before you die
Genres: Drama
Languages: English
Released: 23/05/2005

Brief synopsis of Dear Frankie

After having responded to her son's numerous letters in the guise of his father, a woman hires a stranger to pose as his dad when meeting him.

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Critics Reviews

Rating of 4 stars out of 5 Radio Times

Single mum Emily Mortimer tries to protect her young deaf son from the truth about his abusive father in this poignant Scottish drama from first-time feature director Shona Auerbach. This simple story is rich with precise observation and it tugs at the heartstrings without being maudlin or manipulative. Jack McElhone is wonderfully natural as nine-year-old Frankie, who corresponds religiously with his absentee dad, unaware that it's his devoted mother who's picking up the letters and faking the replies. With its sincere and perceptive script, the beautifully shot film vividly captures the raw emotions of its complex characters. Mortimer is particularly appealing, exuding a mixture of dignity and vulnerability, while Gerard Butler has magnetic allure as the stranger she pays to temporarily masquerade as Frankie's father. Despite occasional flickers of a fairy-tale ending, Auerbach ultimately resists the temptation, maintaining the realism and integrity that give this thoughtful feature its bittersweet charm.

Sunday Express

Mortimer gives her best performance yet

Sunday Mirror

Engaging and heart-warming

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 4 starsTender and Moving

A customer from Surrey , 23/01/2005

I saw this at the cinema on the first weekend of release. I found this film very emotional and moving, a tender film about a boy's longing for his father and his mother's quest to protect him from the truth. The acting was first rate and the film truly touches you. I would recommend this film to anyone.

  90 out of 91 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsGentle, feel good movie

crispin40 from Stirling, Scotland , 28/06/2005

Have been wanting to see this ever since it was released in the cinema but circumstances stopped me from going to see it then. A wonderfully peaceful film about love in various forms. The acting is superb and the direction is un-noticeable so it must be good. A strong cast of Scottish actors - even Emily Mortimer's accent isn't bad considering!

Have recommended it to all my friends who enjoy a slightly sentimental film which leaves one feeling that 'all's right with the world'!

  13 out of 13 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsHeart warming

zehnder from Hampshire , 17/08/2005

This tale about the depths of a mother's love for her deaf son Frankie is an absolute love.

It has heart, warmth and some fantastic character acting.

This is not just one story but is enjoyable for all the changes in the different relationships that you get to explore.

The writer has handled the ending sensitively and thoughtfully while avoiding obvious choices.

I really enjoyed this fine piece of British Film.

  13 out of 13 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsA Modern Fairtytale

moviefan40 from Surrey , 12/05/2005

The beautiful princess is trapped by the evils in her past, she is icy, almost dead to anything but the need to keep the truth from Frankie, her 9 year old son. But Frankie is smart and resourceful and will save her, as well as any son in a storybook. This is a beautiful film, a fantasy with a stark and realistic background, which can also take your breath away with wonder, as one of the characters comments for herself.

The synopsis does not do justice to the stately and beguiling way this tale is told - the shocks and surprises are never gratuitous and the happy ever after ...? Well, that would be telling. Emily Mortimer conveys well the paralysis of fear and yearning, the spare and well-crafted dialogue tells us a little less than we would like to know, but the suspense is not unpleasant. The supporting players have colour and substance and the man who agrees play the part of Frankie's dad, is portrayed with heart-breaking restraint by Gerard

Butler, who, after his showier role in 'Phantom of the Opera' demonstrates that he has real and effective range. But the boy is a wonder of subtlety and sincerity.

A lovely film.

  13 out of 14 people found this review helpful
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