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Top > Arts > Movies > Titles > D > Dear Frankie > Reviews
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» Dear Frankie - Dear Frankie is a sweet wisp of a film, held together—just barely—by its down-to-earth charm and winning performances. By Tim Knight.
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» Dear Frankie - Dear Frankie is definitely sappy and predictable, but it's also well executed. It's a movie that wins you over in short order. By Scott Chitwood.
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» DVD Review: Dear Frankie - By keeping away from big emotional moments, sappy ballads on the soundtrack and other such genre staples, "Dear Frankie" actually steers away from the kind of tearjerker train wreck that it could have easily become.
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» Empire: Dear Frankie - Pretty locations and solid acting keep this assured debut ticking along, but don't expect any big surprises.
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» Filmcritic.com: Dear Frankie - A movie like Dear Frankie needs more quiet moments where we see the characters apart from the chaos surrounding them. Without that, you’re frequently reminded that the actors are just that: actors, and not real people. By Pete Croatto.
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» Latino Review: Dear Frankie - The phrase “heartwarming story” is usually a red flag for corniness, but “Dear Frankie” actually delivers the goods. Includes 3 photos.
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» Reel.com: Dear Frankie - Expertly modulated and uncommonly touching, the Scottish drama Dear Frankie is a deep and delicate look at a young boy's need to believe and a mother's need to protect. By Gary Goldstein.
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» Reeling Review of Dear Frankie - "Dear Frankie" is a film that fully engages with the search for a 'champion skimmer' and defines its characters so subtly that they surprise us when they act just the way we've been told they should. By Robin and Laura Clifford.
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» Review for Dear Frankie - Emily Mortimer, Jack McElhone, and Gerard Butler star in "Dear Frankie," an attentive and well-made Scottish import that emphasizes strong character development in ways that are both subtle and complex. By David N. Butterworth.
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» Spirituality & Practice:Dear Frankie - Shona Auerbach directs this intimate family drama that demonstrates the lengths one loving mother will go to protect her son from the truth about his dangerous and violent father. By Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat.
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» Xiibaro Reviews: Dear Frankie - Under the façade of overly sentimental melodramatics is a surprisingly assured and hopeful rendition of a deaf boy’s story of finding his father. By David Perry.
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» Dear Frankie - This slice of life drama still leaves open the ethical question of lying to your child as a way of showing you're a caring mom. By Dennis Schwartz. (December 9, 2005)
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» DVD Review of Dear Frankie - What makes "Dear Frankie" work is the acting, which is uniformly superb, every character a precise, living, breathing human being. By John J. Puccio. (July 2, 2005)
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» Palo Alto Online: Dear Frankie - This is a lovely ensemble piece that touches on poignant themes of commitment, compassion and the emotional exhaustion inherent in maintaining an elaborate fiction originating from love and fear. By Jeanne Aufmuth. (April 29, 2005)
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» Reviewjournal.com: Dear Frankie - For all its far-fetched plotting, and there are times when "Dear Frankie" definitely pushes the credibility envelope, the movie maintains its emotional truth through every far-fetched twist. By Carol Cling. (April 15, 2005)
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» Movie-Vault.com: Dear Frankie - Sweet without being too sentimental despite having a plot which sounds deceptively like a Hallmark movie or TV soap, Scottish film Dear Frankie is surprisingly worthwhile. By Avril Carruthers. (April 10, 2005)
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» Rogerebert.com: Reviews - Dear Frankie - "The filmmakers work close to the bone, finding emotional truth in hard, lonely lives," says the acclaimed critic in this favorable review of Shona Auerbach's 2004 film. (March 11, 2005)
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» Entertainment Weekly: Dear Frankie - Dear Frankie is a Scottish weepie of such bathos and balderdash that it deserves a drinking game in its rotten honor: Bend an elbow every time you've underestimated how low screenwriter Andrea Gibb and director Shona Auerbach will go to wring a tear. By Lisa Schwarzbaum. (March 9, 2005)
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» The Flick Filosopher: Dear Frankie - Director Shona Auerbach and writer Andrea Gibb have found all sorts of ways to depict tender moments of unspoken love and the wisdom and sweetness of children and will require at least four hankies if you're anything like me. By MaryAnn Johanson. (March 7, 2005)
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» PopMatters: Dear Frankie - Though occasionally movie-child cute, Frankie is for the most part a complicated young person whose only instrument of communication is his body. By Lesley Smith. (March 4, 2005)
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» EI Review: Dear Frankie - "Dear Frankie" uses convenient movie contrivance well to tell a textured story populated by real people. The story as a whole may not completely hold up, but the characterizations created have depth and importance. By Jonathan W. Hickman. (March 3, 2005)
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» FilmJerk.com: Dear Frankie - A sweet, gentle story of unusual relationships, “Dear Frankie” has a giant heart, yet the film rarely dips into sentimentality. An unexpectedly calm performance from Gerard Butler helps matters greatly, making this a rare Miramax surprise. By Brian Orndorf. (March 2, 2005)
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» 2004: The Summer's Best - Even more disappointing is that Dear Frankie, which has received strong buzz so far from the majority of critics, turned out to be an entirely ho-hum motion picture. By Danny Baldwin. (October 8, 2004)
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