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Review: Is Anybody There?

Bored boy befriends down-and-out magician
By PEG ALOI  |  April 29, 2009
3.0 3.0 Stars


VIDEO: The trailer for Is Anybody There?

This seems to be the year for nostalgia films. Here we have relative newcomer John Crowley directing an English working-class yarn from Peter Harness's autobiographical script.

It's 1987, and young Edward (Bill Milner) lives in an old-folks' home run by his parents. Mum (Anne-Marie Duff) is sweet and dedicated, Dad (David Morrissey) is harried and headed for a midlife crisis. Bored and cranky, Edward passes the time trying to record the psychic reverberations of the recently departed. When a down-and-out stage magician named Clarence (Michael Caine) shows up, a grudging friendship develops.

Despite the treacle (unavoidable given the premise), the film treats its characters as flawed and fallible: Clarence's broken widower's heart is revealed to be something less innocent. And Caine's own magical career is mirrored in Clarence's cockney slang, his sad regret, and his bag of tricks.

Related: Shuffling off to infamy, Review: Harry Brown, Review: Inception, More more >
  Topics: Reviews , Michael Caine, Michael Caine, Michael Caine,  More more >
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