Product Details
Millions

Millions
Directed by Danny Boyle

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Product Description

From legendary director Danny Boyle (Trainspotting, 28 Days Later) comes ?a family film of limitless imagination and surprising joy!? (Chicago Sun-Times)

It?s holiday season and seven-year-old Damian believes he?s received a divine gift from above when a suitcase filled with cash literally falls out of the sky. Damian is anxious to share the wealth with those less fortunate while his fun-loving brother Anthony would rather spend it like there?s no tomorrow! But when the loot turns out to be stolen, both the boys? plans are put to the test?with heartwarming and hilarious results.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #15164 in DVD
  • Brand: TCFHE
  • Released on: 2005-11-01
  • Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English, Spanish, French
  • Dubbed in: English, Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 98 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Millions wears its heart on its sleeve, and it wears it well. Two boys, still grieving the death of their mother, find themselves the unwitting benefactors of a bag of bank robbery loot in the week before the United Kingdom switches its official currency to the Euro. What's a kid to do? Director Danny Boyle takes a simple premise and, with the help of Frank Cottrell Boyce's sweet, smart script, finds something special to say about the hopes everyone has for the future of a changing world. Brothers Anthony and Damian have vastly different agendas for the stash, and then have to deal not only with the money's original thief but with the disarming woman who seems to be stealing their widowed father. The film is full of quirks that work--seven-year-old Damian (an endearing Alex Etel) has private conversations with a collection of eclectic religious saints--and a technically spirited way of commingling both the scary realities and fanciful imaginings of young minds. --Steve Wiecking

From The New Yorker
In a surprisingly sunny suburb of Manchester, two motherless little boys-one pious and generous (Alex Etel), the other enterprising and manipulative (Lewis McGibbon)-gain control of a Nike bag filled with cash after thieves throw it off a moving train. Will the secretive boys invest the money, give it to the poor, spend it on video games? And when will the nasty blackguards who stole the money show up, eager to recover the swag? "Millions," written by Frank Cottrell Boyce and directed by Danny Boyle, should have had the enchantment of "Empire of the Sun" or the recent Italian film "I'm Not Scared" or a dozen other child-centered stories and movies, but Boyle can't stop showing off his virtuosity. He changes camera speeds, zips through sequences, sends things flying through the air. We're supposed to be overwhelmed by magic, but what we see is fancy film technique and a lot of overstrained whimsy. To use special effects without coming off as glib, you may have to be a boy at heart yourself. -David Denby
Copyright © 2006 The New Yorker


Customer Reviews

Shows the constructive and destructive power of money4
This was a great film that really shows what money can do to people. It is also fascinating that it is the youngest person who actually has philanthropic ideas on how to spend it.

Spurred on by the urgency that England is switching over to the Euro in a few days (not gonna happen,) freckle-faced Damien and his brother, Anthony, have to think fast. Damien feels the money came from God and therefore should be used to help the less fortunate. Anthony feels like they *are* the less fortunate and should use it to help themselves. Damien is also helped by odd visions of saints who counsel him. Meanwhile, Anthony is out pricing real estate.

Of course, tossing money on unsuspecting children is not really God's style, as the boys' father states. The money was actually tossed by a bank robber who wants it back at any cost.

This is a fun yet profound film that accurately shows greed, kindness, faith, and selfishness all resulting from the same event. The viewer is left with a satisfied feeling and even a few introspective questions like, "What would I do if the same thing happened to me?"

Highly recommended--

"I thought it came from God!"5
Maverick British Director Danny Boyle has really outdone himself with Millions, an absolutely terrific, sincere, and intrinsically spiritual family film about money, faith, the power of imagination, and the unquestionable ability to believe that everything is going to turn out all right in the end. Boyle uses his trademark visual flair to produce a gorgeously heartfelt and emotionally delicate children's movie that is all about being good, sometimes being bad, and often being downright scared.

Set in and around a new suburban housing development in Northern England, the story centers on lonesome, motherless spiritually receptive seven-year-old Damian (Alex Etel, making a sensational film debut), his hardheaded 9-year-old brother Anthony (Lewis McGibbon), and their adoring, loving father, Ronnie (James Nesbitt). The film begins as Damian, Anthony, and Ronnie are moving to a new house because their old home is full of memories, where once upon a time they lived with a loving wife and mother.

Recently deceased, the missing woman hangs over this woeful threesome, and her absence shapes their days and nights. They see this move as a fresh start, a way to squash the ghosts of the past, while also looking forward to a happier and more comfortable future. Anthony is the financially savvier of the two boys - consumer orientated and realistic, he's right up with the latest exchange rates, as the Country is just about to convert to Euros. Damian, quieter and more sensitive, spends the days on his own, building a house of discarded cardboard boxes next to the local train line. Possessed with a vivid imagination, he loves reading about saints who sometimes come alive for him, and works on elevating his mum to the ranks of one of them.

Then temptation falls from the sky, literally, when a when a big black overstuffed bag full of money falls on Damian. He thinks it's a message from God, and faced with the burden of responsibility, he decides to give as much of the money away to the poor as he can. Of course, the streetwise Anthony has other plans - he wants to invest it in real estate, or get it transferred into Euros (he doesn't want to pay the forty percent tax on it). But the original owners of the money are hot on the trail and things start to get very frightening for Damien when a leather-jacketed, malevolent looking man turns up demanding that the boy to hand the money back.

Fast paced and visually stunning, the movie jumps along from scene to scene catching the viewer and quickly reeling us in. With a cute face that is splashed with freckles, Damien is a gravely beautiful child, who believes he's on speaking terms with the saints (they regularly appear with translucent halos on their heads). The young actor brings to the role the strange ethereality of those children who never fit in, but curl into their own private worlds, giggling at jokes no one else hears.

Millions has plenty of story for both adults and children to appreciate and its sense of fun is totally infectious. The characters are all absolutely endearing and lovely to watch, including a sweetheart for Ronnie, a quirky group of Latter-day Saints, a bunch of train robbers, an eccentric local police officer, a boogeyman, and of course all the nomadic martyrs. Mr. Boyle uses all manner of enjoyable tricks to show us what his characters see; more poignantly, he also shows us what Damien sees, and it's a world where absurdity is an everyday occurrence and what takes places inside a young boy's head fights for shelf space with what's happening in the outside world. Mike Leonard March 05.

Faith, Hope, and Charity - with a little help from the Saints5
Danny Boyle ('28 Days Later', 'Trainspotting', 'A Life Less Ordinary') has a way with stories that transports a good script (in this case one by Frank Cottrell Boyce) into a cinematic range that creates magic. MILLIONS may seem like a little family tale on the surface, but in Boyle's hands this story about the struggle between Janus ethics vaults off into magical realism, happily taking the audience along for a journey of wonder and joy and the importance of charity.

Damian (Alexander Nathan Etel) and his older brother Anthony (Lewis Owen McGibbon) are moved by their father Ronnie (James Nesbitt) to a new housing project after the untimely death of the boys' mother. The brothers are devoted to each other yet Anthony is the pragmatist while Damian is the dreamer, a lad who regularly has visions and poignant converations with dead saints, always asking if they know anything about St. Maureen (his recently deceased mother). Damian believes in miracles and when suddenly a Nike bag containing a quarter of a million British pounds falls on his playhouse he believes it is from God and that it is his responsibility to distribute the money to the poor. When he shares the secret with Anthony, the latter's psyche begins to organize ways to spend and invest the money - because the British sterling will soon convert to the Euro making the bag's stash useless.

The journey of how the two brothers cope with their instant fortune and how they cope with their family minus one forms the line of the film. There are good guys, bad guys, various saints, hilarious encounters with mundane ethically bifurcated folks like a Mormon team - all of whom make the visual and emotional aspects of this film thoroughly entertaining. The actors, especially young Atel, are superb and Boyle's use of the magical ignites the story into an unforgettable fable and tale of humanity. Highly recommended for everyone to see. Grady Harp, November 05.