A One Mann’s Movies review of “Frankie” (2021).

Bob the Movie Man Rating:

My first return visit to a UK cinema for a VERY long time. Hoorah!! I only wish it was for a better film since “Frankie” – a Cineworld Unlimited screening – was frank-ie-ly pretty awful!

Frankie (Isabelle Huppert) takes a morning topless dip, much to the disquiet of her grandaughter (Sennia Nanua). (Source: Sony Pictures Classics).

Plot Summary:

In “Frankie”, the eponymous French movie star (played by Isabelle Huppert) is dying of cancer and gathers her complex family and friends around her for one last ‘family holiday’ in the picturesque Portuguese town of Sintra. We follow the events of a single day of the vacation as frictions and back-stories of the players become more evident.

Jimmy (Brendan Gleeson), Frankie (Isabella Huppert) and Michel (Pascal Greggory) listening to the tourist stuff with tour guide Tiago (a nice performance by Carloto Cotta), (Source: Sony Pictures Classics).

Certification:

US: PG-13. UK: 12A.

Talent:

Starring: Isabelle Huppert, Brendan Gleeson, Marisa Tomei, Greg Kinnear, Ariyon Bakare, Vinette Robinson, Jérémie Renier, Sennia Nanua.

Directed by: Ira Sachs.

Written by: Ira Sachs, Mauricio Zacharias.

A chance meeting for Jimmy (Brendan Gleeson) with the “Star Wars” team of Gary (Greg Kinnear) and Ilene (Marisa Tomei). (Source: Sony Pictures Classics).

“Frankie” Review:

Positives:

  • Sintra looks gorgeous: as a regular visitor to Portugal’s Silver Coast, it’s a place I’ve not yet visited. The cinematography of the region makes me want to change that.
  • There are a couple of decent scenes in the movie: both involving the trustworthy Greg Kinnear: one involving him trying to sell a film idea to Frankie (who knows, but won’t tell him, that she won’t be around for it); and another with Kinnear and Tomei at their hotel.
.

The real star of the show – Sintra in Portugal. (Source: Sony Pictures Classics).

Negatives:

  • Where do I start…. the film is as dull as dishwater!
    • A criticism I had of the otherwise impressive “Nomadland” was that the story arc of the leading character was shallow and not very compelling. The story arc here is a bloody straight line! Virtually nothing happens in the movie and it goes nowhere. Events occur as isolated snippets in the storyline. For example, the ‘loss’ of an expensive bracelet is randomly lobbed into the story, but then is never referenced back in any future narrative.
    • When the ending happened (which the illustrious Mrs Movie Man referred to as a “blessing”) it was a non-event. The lady behind us in the cinema exclaimed “WHAT????”. And I could understand her frustration.
  • The direction is distinctly lacking. Aside from the couple of decent scenes (see above), most of the shots feel like first takes, with the actors doing read-throughs of the clunky script to try to work out how to best sell the lines. “OK, time to film it for real now”. But director Sachs has already shouted “Cut and Print…. now who’s for some more vinos and Pastel de Nata?”! Were they aiming for some sort of naturalistic fumbling of the character’s conversations? For that’s how it comes across, and it’s just awful.
  • The script feels like a wasted opportunity. The set-up should have been a good one for an intense drama. And there are flashes (merely flashes) of potential brilliance in there: a formative step-brother/step-sister incident is based around the film “Grease”, which is mirrored (either cleverly or purely through coincidence!?) in the beach-side romance of Maya (Sennia Nanua) and Portuguese holiday-maker Pedro (Manuel Sá Nogueira). And does the homosexual Michel (Pascal Greggory) have his sights on Jimmy (Brendan Gleeson)? Or Tiago? Or both? None of these potentially interesting strands ever get tied down.
  • Aside from the poor script and the poor direction, some of the acting performances are unconvincing. “The Girl with all the Gifts” was a fabulous film – it made my number 2 slot of 2016! And I called out young Sennia Nanua as “one to watch for the future” as the zombie girl at the heart of the film. Here she was 17 at the time of filming. But I’m afraid I just didn’t find her convincing as the moody teen. (By the way, I only single her out, since I was so impressed with her previous performance: with the exception perhaps of Kinnear, Tomei and Carloto Cotta. none of the rest of the cast consistently shine either.)

The girl with all the grown up gifts – Sennia Nanua and a holiday romance. (Source: Sony Pictures Classics).

Summary Thoughts on “Frankie”:

It’s a real shame that my first visit back to the cinema was such a let-down. Ira Sachs is not a director I know, but he comes with a strong reputation (for 2016’s “Little Men”). But here he delivers a plain stinker.

I saw “Frankie” at a preview screening and the movie is set to go on general release on Friday. But I’m afraid this movie has a word associated with it, and the word is “Avoid”.

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Trailer:

The trailer for “Frankie” is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v0DiHtZ3wtA .

By bobwp

Dr Bob Mann lives in Hampshire in the UK. Now retired from his job as an IT professional, he is owner of One Mann's Movies and an enthusiastic reviewer of movies as "Bob the Movie Man". Bob is also a regular film reviewer on BBC Radio Solent.

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