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News
Exclusive: RT Visits the Set of Franklyn
We step into Meanwhile City with stars Eva Green, Ryan Phillippe and Sam Riley.
by Joe Utichi | November 28, 2007
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Page | 1 2
Sam Riley stars in FranklynJust another rainy day in London. The mood at a swanky but down-to-earth eatery in the East End is tense. By the window, a young couple have something of a disagreement. She then walks out whilst he sits back in his chair, resigned to his fate. Someone from across the room yells "cut!"

Suddenly the mood livens, the rain stops, the girl walks back in and laughs with her companion and around them a gaggle of technicians get to work, fixing lighting, trailing cables and turning on smoke machines. Welcome to the world of Franklyn. The girl is Eva Green, the boy Sam Riley and the sorcerer who changed the mood in the room with a single word is first-time director Gerald McMorrow.

Rotten Tomatoes has come to his set to find out more about his creation. Intrigued as we've been by the premise, we still don't quite understand it on paper. And as we stand in the East End bar, confusedly trying to put the pieces together for ourselves, he eventually helps us out.

"Franklyn is basically about four intertwining stories, three of which are based in contemporary London and one of which is based in a kind of parallel fantasy environment called Meanwhile City," he says (and this is where it gets confusing) "Our hero in that strand is this sort-of masked vigilante detective who's the only atheist in Meanwhile City, played by Ryan Phillippe, who basically runs around trying to extract people from cults, has a big cynicism about the whole thing and hates The Ministry with a vengeance."

Ryan Phillippe (really) as Jonathan Preest in Franklyn
Ryan Phillippe (no, really) as Jonathan Preest in Franklyn

Meanwhile City? The Ministry? "It's this place which is sort-of run by a shadowy, religious uber-power called The Ministry who has decided, over the centuries, that as long as they can get their population to believe in something - anything - they can control them. People have faiths and religions based on strange things like The Seventh Day Manicurists and Washing Machine Street Preachers. Their doctrines and dogmas are all based on things like washing machine instructions."

Right. So that's one of the four strands explained, then. "The other three strands are in contemporary London. Eva Green plays Amelia who's basically a much damaged, suicidal art student who's drifting in and out of her video art installations involving cry-for-help suicide attempts. Then you have Sam Riley who plays Milo, and he's probably much more normal and down-to-earth and he's basically just been jilted at the altar. That promotes him to suddenly try and search for the purity of his first love. And then the fourth story belongs to Bernard Hill who plays Peter, a church warden in Cambridge who comes down to London to find his homeless son. And all four strands come together at the end."

Eva Green as a moody suicidal artist in Franklyn

Alas, asking McMorrow how they connect, which is really the sticking point for us right now, would spoil the ending, and so we remain confused. "It's rather intricate piece of plot work, but it's one of those things; you can't really say too much. But ultimately, hopefully, it's one of those things where if I were going to see it, I wouldn't want to be told ahead of time."
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Comments (1-10 of 10 posts) | Reply
tawo
tawo writes:
on Nov 28 2007 09:11 AM

My kind of movie... complicated....witty, smart, fantasy.. thank God it's a U.K. based movie. I'm all for it cant wait.

(Reply to this)
jpotter
jpotter writes:
on Nov 28 2007 09:12 AM

sounds interesting...

(Reply to this)
vcdoni77
vcdoni77 writes:
on Nov 28 2007 09:46 AM

So it's like V for Vendetta, just with cults


(Reply to this)
apostate
apostate writes:
on Nov 28 2007 10:01 AM

A messianic atheist. Oh the irony.

Man does this sound pretentious.


(Reply to this)
Alcy
Alcy writes:
on Nov 28 2007 02:39 PM

This movie can be as pretentious as it likes and I'll still be hanging out to see it, I love complicated plots and it stars my favourite leading lady Eva Green looking as gorgeous as ever...and I'm sure given her talent the role will be fantastic too. I can't say much about the rest of the cast except that Ryan Phillipe sometimes surprises and his role sounds interesting.

(Reply to this)
De4ective Detectiv3
De4ective Detectiv3 writes:
on Nov 28 2007 06:21 PM

In reply to this comment (#1313923)
This sounds pretentious??? Coming from a Tarantino fan I'll take that with a grain of salt. This movie sounds like it could be great; it also sounds like the type of movie that could never be made in America - I mean, look at the reaction the Golden Compass gets for cryin out loud. Can you imagine how the Holy Rollers will react when they hear about this one!? It puts a smile to my face:)

(Reply to this)
wordweaver
wordweaver writes:
on Nov 29 2007 10:40 AM

Eva Green has the potential to be every director's muse.

(Reply to this)
mollz_riley08
mollz_riley08 writes:
on Jan 14 2008 01:02 PM

Yay! Sam Riley was amazing in "Control" and I'm sure he's going to be just as amazing in this film. I'm so going to see this when it comes out.

(Reply to this)
jokerboy1991
jokerboy1991 writes:
on Oct 16 2008 04:08 PM

Looks AWESOME!

(Reply to this)
grundolf
grundolf writes:
on Oct 22 2008 07:02 AM

I've seen this last weekend at the BFI festival, and it _is_ AWESOME. Although the sci-fi strand is what stands out the most visually, it is just one of four stories, and that it features so heavily in the initial trailer and reviews will probably turn people off, as you have so rightly pointed out, the religious right for starters. It is _not_ a movie about religion, it does have a point of view but no agenda. It is smart, intricate, brilliantly scripted and acted. It is a thriller that M.Night would kill for, in the sense that all the pieces come together at the end and unfortunately to refute the doubts one would have to give it away. If you like intelligent and original, Franklyn is an absolute delight.

(Reply to this)
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