Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Dear Frankie

Dear FrankieMaybe it's just the films that make it over here, but I've loved every film from Scotland that I've seen over the last while. The latest one is Dear Frankie, directed by Shona Auerbach, who also was Director of Photography. The film is built around the characters and the wonderful performances that the actors give. The key is in the writing which sets up a dramatic situation that highlights a story about a family dealing with a secret. Emily Mortimer is a mother who hasn't told her son that she is estranged from his father. She has told him that his father is away at sea and corresponds with her son as his father. But when the ship that she chose is coming in to port and she has to decide what to do.
While the plot moves the characters around, the film lingers on the characters as we watch them struggle with their lives. I loved the look of the film and the pace, which allows us to watch performances and interactions between characters. Mortimer is wonderful and much of her performance is in her face and body language. One of the things that I've been enjoying in many recent films is messiness in situations and characters. Things aren't neat and tidy, but with ambiguity and suggestion. I like it when you get a sense of watching something unfold... it's a better approximation of reality than so-called "reality" television. Dear Frankie is a great film about unconditional love. tags: , ,
[/film] link

Older Bitdepth
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
2004
2003
2002

Categorized Bitdepth
art
articles
books
film
film: festivals
magazines
music
people
podcasting
software
sound
television
web

About Bitdepth

Regular Stops
Odeo
O'Reilly Network
The Register
Metafilter
Technorati

Relevant
My Bitdepth Digest
Tricia's Blogosphere
Design the Web
Echoes in the Rink
When Voices Rise...
Screen Arts blog
My Mac.com Site
My ZeD Space
my del.icio.us links
my 43 things

Bitdepth RSS Feed