IMDb RATING
7.0/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
A year after his parent's death, the young Goose searches for his lost dog one Christmas Eve, meeting Anthony, a man with no memory who can see things people have lost upon touching them.A year after his parent's death, the young Goose searches for his lost dog one Christmas Eve, meeting Anthony, a man with no memory who can see things people have lost upon touching them.A year after his parent's death, the young Goose searches for his lost dog one Christmas Eve, meeting Anthony, a man with no memory who can see things people have lost upon touching them.
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen in Dr Clarence's house Goose remarks: I'm sure Professor X will be able to find it. Jason Flemyng features in X-men: First Class which came out in the same year.
- GoofsWhen at the end with the girl on the ice. Fire fighter would no not to walk on the ice that is barely able to support the Girl. He would lie down and crawl to distribute the weight out.
Featured review
Despite the familiar-feeling storyline
I don't know why this urban festive fairytale from 2011 doesn't get repeated every Christmas as - taking its cue from A Christmas Carol and It's A Wonderful Life, though still being distinctive enough in its own right - it has all the hallmarks of being an enduring, evergreen seasonal classic.
In turn, heartwarming and poignantly bittersweet, Lost Christmas rarely puts a foot wrong and in the central role, Eddie Izzard both impresses and suggests he has a future at the helm of the TARDIS should he ever consider it.
Films that rely upon divine intervention for their happy endings are, for the rational minded amongst us, inherently sad. For instance, most people think of It's a Wonderful Life (1946) as being a feel-good film, when in reality it is nothing of the sort. Remove the fantastical from the story, and all you are left with is one decidedly dead George Bailey. Whilst others are crying at the beautiful miracle of its resolution, the rest of us are left to cry at the tragedy of it all. And so for me, it is this other-worldly element, in all its brazen unreality, that underlines and accentuates the earthy crappiness that sits just below the surface of such tales to such a level that no social-realist misery-fest could ever hope to match it.
Which brings me to this charmingly diverting though decidedly imperfect "urban fairy-tale" - a child-centred cross between the aforementioned yuletide favourite and Charles Dickens's much filmed novella A Christmas Carol (1843) (with a bit of Shameless thrown in for good measure), in which a mysterious amnesia-suffering stranger (Izzard) helps several people, in particular an orphaned young boy (Mills), to find a number of seemingly-though-not-actually-unrelated things that they have lost, on an snowy Manchester Christmas Eve.
Despite the familiar-feeling storyline, Hay's reasonably well crafted film is seldom predictable, and its performances are all fine. However, Wiseman's score often feels rather intrusive and is more than a tad manipulative in spots, dampening its emotional power by overemphasising it. Nevertheless, by the time it reaches its surprisingly powerful conclusion, you'd have to be a particularly hard-hearted person not to be moved by its (not-really) happy ending in some way.
In turn, heartwarming and poignantly bittersweet, Lost Christmas rarely puts a foot wrong and in the central role, Eddie Izzard both impresses and suggests he has a future at the helm of the TARDIS should he ever consider it.
Films that rely upon divine intervention for their happy endings are, for the rational minded amongst us, inherently sad. For instance, most people think of It's a Wonderful Life (1946) as being a feel-good film, when in reality it is nothing of the sort. Remove the fantastical from the story, and all you are left with is one decidedly dead George Bailey. Whilst others are crying at the beautiful miracle of its resolution, the rest of us are left to cry at the tragedy of it all. And so for me, it is this other-worldly element, in all its brazen unreality, that underlines and accentuates the earthy crappiness that sits just below the surface of such tales to such a level that no social-realist misery-fest could ever hope to match it.
Which brings me to this charmingly diverting though decidedly imperfect "urban fairy-tale" - a child-centred cross between the aforementioned yuletide favourite and Charles Dickens's much filmed novella A Christmas Carol (1843) (with a bit of Shameless thrown in for good measure), in which a mysterious amnesia-suffering stranger (Izzard) helps several people, in particular an orphaned young boy (Mills), to find a number of seemingly-though-not-actually-unrelated things that they have lost, on an snowy Manchester Christmas Eve.
Despite the familiar-feeling storyline, Hay's reasonably well crafted film is seldom predictable, and its performances are all fine. However, Wiseman's score often feels rather intrusive and is more than a tad manipulative in spots, dampening its emotional power by overemphasising it. Nevertheless, by the time it reaches its surprisingly powerful conclusion, you'd have to be a particularly hard-hearted person not to be moved by its (not-really) happy ending in some way.
helpful•62
- yusufpiskin
- Nov 2, 2019
Details
Box office
- Budget
- £1,200,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 29 minutes
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