Millions

April 8, 2005 0 By Fans
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Plot

Ethics, being human and the soul come to the fore when a 7-year old finds a bag of Pounds just days before the currency is switched to Euros and learns what we are really made of.

Release Year: 2004

Rating: 7.0/10 (15,175 voted)

Critic's Score: 74/100

Director:
Danny Boyle

Stars: Alex Etel, James Nesbitt, Daisy Donovan

Storyline
The UK is about to switch its currency from Pounds to Euros, giving a gang a chance to rob the poorly-secured train loaded with money on its way to incineration. But, during the robbery, one of the big bags falls literally from the sky on Damian's playhouse, a 7-year old given to talking to saints. The boy then starts seeing what the world and the people around him are made of. Ethics, being human and the soul all come to the forefront in this film.

Cast:

Alex Etel

Damian


Lewis McGibbon

Anthony


James Nesbitt

Ronnie


Daisy Donovan

Dorothy


Christopher Fulford

The Man


Pearce Quigley

Community Policeman


Jane Hogarth

Mum


Alun Armstrong

St Peter


Enzo Cilenti

St Francis


Nasser Memarzia

St Joseph


Kathryn Pogson

St Clare


Harry Kirkham

St Nicholas


Cornelius Macarthy

Gonzaga


Kolade Agboke

Ambrosio


Leslie Phillips

Leslie Phillips

Taglines:
Can anyone be truly good?



Details

Official Website:
Fox Searchlight [United States] |
Pathé [France] |

Release Date: 8 April 2005

Filming Locations: East Lancs Steam Railway, Bury, Greater Manchester, England, UK

Opening Weekend: $70,224
(USA)
(13 March 2005)
(5 Screens)

Gross: $6,583,149
(USA)
(28 August 2005)



Technical Specs

Runtime:



Did You Know?

Trivia:

Instead of making cast and crew T-shirts, production donated the money to Water Aid, to build a well in Africa (like the family did in the film).

Goofs:

Factual errors:
During the house-building sequence at the beginning of the film, the Moon is seen rising behind the house, but it moves upwards to the left. As the film is set in England (in the northern hemisphere), it should rise towards the right.

Quotes:

[first lines]

Damian Cunningham:
[voiceover]
The French have said au revoir to the franc, the Germans have said auf wiedersehen to the mark, and the Portuguese have said… whatever to their thing.



User Review

Shallow Grave through the eyes of children

Rating: 8/10

Tonight's screening of Danny Boyle's Millions at the Toronto
International Film Festival was the film's world premiere. Boyle was in
attendance along with the two young stars of the film, and he
introduced what obviously is a project that he feels very dear about.

Two young brothers in Manchester come across a gym bag overflowing with
cash, British pounds, days before the bank of England switches over to
the Euro.

Damian (Alex Etel) is a young philanthropist who spends his time
learning (and daydreaming) about the saints. He believes the money,
which seems to have fallen from the heavens, is a gift from God and
wants to use the money to help the poor, while his older brother
Anthony (Lewis McGibbon) is a hot-blooded capitalist who is already
thinking of exchange rates, inflation, and the cost of property. He
uses the money to buy the affection of his new classmates.

There are obvious parallels to be drawn with Boyle's first film Shallow
Grave, (reviewed here) which also tells the story of a group of friends
who find a mysterious surplus of cash, and the morals of what to do
with it.

Millions, however, is like a feel-good retelling of Shallow Grave
through the eyes of children. It's sweet without being saccharine, and
it's altogether enjoyable. I was incredibly refreshed to see a movie
with a situation like this not make the characters look bad for wanting
to keep money that isn't theirs. This isn't a film that chastises the
greedy or denounces the almighty dollar; it's one that celebrates the
chance to make a difference in one's own life, and the lives of others.

I particularly enjoyed the fantasy elements in which Damian seeks
advice from various saints who appear to him in visions that blur the
line between imagination and spiritual visitation.

Screened in the gorgeously ornate Elgin theatre, the film garnered a
standing ovation, which may only have been for the benefit the two
young stars of the film, but I couldn't help but get a little emotional
to see the two of them, standing beside their director and surrounded
by audience members, cry at the outburst of love and applause from a
room full of strangers after such a tender and affectionate movie.