Ultimately it doesn't quite work, but along the way it is easy to be somewhat sucked in, especially by Eva Green's suicidal artist and Sam Riley's emotionally shattered dreamer
Franklyn (2009)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:28
Fresh:17
Rotten:11
Average Rating:5.3/10
Consensus: Gerald McMorrow's bold debut is a complex and ambitious film that highlights the director's potential, but its multi-layered story takes time to develop and might be frustrating for some.
Genre: Science-Fiction/Fantasy
Starring: Ryan Phillippe, Eva Green, Sam Riley, Bernard Hill
Starring: Ryan Phillippe, Eva Green, Sam Riley, Bernard Hill
Director: Gerald McMorrow
Director: Gerald McMorrow
Reviews for Franklyn
Franklyn is wonky and self-defeating: there are lots of gauche moments. Still, it’s entertaining, and commendable for its strangeness.
Franklyn is puzzling in a way some may think tiresome and others intriguing. Gerald McMorrow, whose first feature this is, has talent, but just as he starts tying up the loose ends, the film unravels.
If ambition and flair were the only hallmarks of a five-star film then Franklyn would be top of the class.
Look past the odd shortcoming in the storytelling, and there’s a brave movie here, one that’s prepared to tackle some weighty issues about religion and obsession.
Marks McMorrow as a director to watch, one unafraid of taking risks and going against the grain of the British film industry. It's not for everyone, but surrender to the limitless ambition and off-kilter tone and it's an engaging 100 minutes.
An admirably non-formulaic drama, which manages to reconcile the opposed British film traditions of contemporary, realistic, low-key character drama with eccentric, flamboyant, Gothic fantasy. It certainly marks out McMorrow as a talent to watch.
‘Franklyn’ has conceptual boldness and visual imagination that set it apart from the pack.
McMorrow's ideas may be too damn bold and expansive for Franklyn to succeed on every level, but it's a striking debut from a writer-director unafraid to reach as high as he can.
It’s a convoluted piece of storytelling that repays more on a visual level than on a logical one. But you can’t fault its ambition and imagination.
He is aiming high. And yet, to use a recondite and specialist critical term, this film is massively up itself.
The spiralling plot lines slowly weave together with real dexterity, resulting in a payoff that’s as unexpected as it is satisfying. A cracking sci-fi brainteaser.
The attempts to compress so many themes into such a short space of time end up making Franklyn seem like it's leapt from the imagination of Garth Marenghi. Ultimately, McMorrow's over-ambitious debut is a beautiful mess.
You have to give the debut director his due for an absurdly ambitious attempt to do something genuinely different in an age cursed with tired formula and dollar-obsessed convention.
Frustrating. Not as clever as it thinks it is, but often far better looking than you’d expect. You have to laud McMorrow for a brazen Brit debut that isn’t either A) a horror or B) takes place in a gang.
This bold and complex British fantasy-drama is an impressive debut for writerdirector Gerald McMorrow.
Franklyn is an ambitious sci-fi film that squeezes every penny from its £6m budget and throws it onto the screen to create a terrific futuristic cityscape. Kudos for that, yet no amount of good looks can hide the fact it’s almost unwatchable.
What is real, what is fiction and why should I care? That is what you will be asking yourself for the first 70 minutes of this strange film.
It takes a quarter of the movie’s duration to start detecting its drift, another quarter to start caring. The fantastications have a stronger wallop than the realism.
Allow that director Gerald McMorrow's feature debut shows ambition in fusing psychodrama, fantasy and metropolitan romance. Sadly, coherence and comprehensibility have been left for dead.
Latest News for Franklyn
February 26, 2009:
Exclusive: Franklyn - Director's Sketchbook
Franklyn may be Gerald McMorrow's debut feature film, but by the standards of even the most experienced of helmers it's an ambitious and visually-stunning movie, telling the... More...
February 04, 2009:
Video Exclusive: Franklyn Director Introduction
Gerald McMorrow's dystopian epic Franklyn is set between contemporary London and a fictional metropolis called Meanwhile City as four disparate characters are brought together.... More...
January 13, 2009:
Intriguing, cerebral science-fiction drama. Will it be the next Children of Men? ![]()
More...
January 10, 2009:
Watch: New Official Trailer. ![]()
More...
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