Title: | Movie Reviews and Discussion |
Notice: | Please do DIR/TITLE before starting a new topic on a movie! |
Moderator: | VAXCPU::michaud o.dec.com::tamara::eppes |
Created: | Thu Jan 28 1993 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1249 |
Total number of notes: | 16012 |
Frankie Starlight (****.5) - I wasn't expecting too much from this movie - basically chose it because it stars Gabriel Byrne and Matt Dillon and also because it was directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg who directed "Let it Be", other musical videos and "Brideshead Revisted" I was enthralled for the entire movie. It takes place over a number of years and the story flashes backwards and forwards from the main characters perspective. He is Frankie, a dwarf who is isolated in his adult years by his deformity. We learn about his mother's past - in 1946 she stored away on an American troopship and partied with a number of the men until she was discovered by the ship's officer and then put off the boat in Ireland. Alone, penniless and pregnant, she tries to make her way in this new country. She meets Jack (Byrne) who is married and has a family of his own but who is attracted to Bernadette and becomes her lover as well as a father figure to Frankie. Jack is an amateur astonomer and he inspires in Frank an abiding love of the night sky and dubs him "Frankie Starlight". After Jack and his family move away, Bernadette meets a young Texan (Dillon) who also helps Frank along the road to adulthood. He takes Frankie and his mother back to Texas, but she is never content. I don't want to give too much more of the story away. I hope this movie finds distribution because it is really special and very charming. The question and answer session after was great - Lindsay-Hogg is a real talker and some of the interesting points were: * the adult Frankie was played by Rudi Davies who had never acted before. He is a famous sculpture in Dublin and hopes to act again, although the demand for dwarf actors is obviously slight * the young Frankie was played by a wonderful boy named Corban Walker. He is almost 13 and was more thrilled that he got to meet some of the British football players than he was with the actors he worked with * there is a film clip of "A Place in the Sun" used in this movie and someone asked why that clip - he answered that he wanted to use a clip that showed the most beautiful people at that time (Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Cliff) and contrast them to Frankie who may not have been beautiful on the outside, but he was on the inside
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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939.1 | PCBUOA::BELLOWS | Thu Sep 14 1995 11:41 | 1 | ||
sounds good. was this on video? | |||||
939.2 | TP011::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Thu Sep 14 1995 14:14 | 4 | |
Mr Butkovich is reviewing new releases he's been seeing at the Toronto Film Festival. If Mr Butkovich is, in reality Ms Butkovich, I apologize. | |||||
939.3 | PCBUOA::BELLOWS | Thu Sep 14 1995 15:03 | 2 | ||
Cool. Some of these films will show up at the Museum of Fine Arts film program as the director of the program is there as well. | |||||
939.4 | he is in fact a she (that's me!) | TROOA::BUTKOVICH | blink and I'm gone | Thu Sep 14 1995 17:50 | 1 |
939.5 | TP011::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Fri Sep 15 1995 10:44 | 5 | |
-< he is in fact a she (that's me!) >- Apologies. With no name attached, I had a 50-50 chance. andrew | |||||
939.6 | 8*) | TROOA::BUTKOVICH | blink and I'm gone | Fri Sep 15 1995 23:20 | 1 |
My name's Chris .... would that have helped? | |||||
939.7 | 8*)> | PROGID::allen | Christopher Allen, DECladebug, ZKO 381-0864 | Tue Sep 19 1995 13:34 | 4 |
Nope. -Chris |