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My Life So Far

  • 1999
  • PG-13
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
My Life So Far (1999)
BiographyComedyDrama

Memoir of the lives of a family growing up on a post World War I British estate headed up by a strong disciplinarian, her daughter, her inventor husband, their ten year old son and his older... Read allMemoir of the lives of a family growing up on a post World War I British estate headed up by a strong disciplinarian, her daughter, her inventor husband, their ten year old son and his older sister. Through the household comes a number of suitors hoping to impress the young woman... Read allMemoir of the lives of a family growing up on a post World War I British estate headed up by a strong disciplinarian, her daughter, her inventor husband, their ten year old son and his older sister. Through the household comes a number of suitors hoping to impress the young woman, including an aviator. When the elder woman's son shows up at the estate with his French ... Read all

  • Director
    • Hugh Hudson
  • Writers
    • Denis Forman
    • Simon Donald
  • Stars
    • Colin Firth
    • Rosemary Harris
    • Irène Jacob
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    3.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hugh Hudson
    • Writers
      • Denis Forman
      • Simon Donald
    • Stars
      • Colin Firth
      • Rosemary Harris
      • Irène Jacob
    • 35User reviews
    • 35Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    My Life So Far
    Trailer 0:58
    My Life So Far

    Photos11

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    Top cast46

    Edit
    Colin Firth
    Colin Firth
    • Edward
    Rosemary Harris
    Rosemary Harris
    • Gamma
    Irène Jacob
    Irène Jacob
    • Aunt Heloise
    • (as Irene Jacob)
    Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio
    Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio
    • Moira
    Malcolm McDowell
    Malcolm McDowell
    • Uncle Morris MacIntosh
    Robert Norman
    Robert Norman
    • Fraser
    Tchéky Karyo
    Tchéky Karyo
    • Gabriel Chenoux
    • (as Tcheky Karyo)
    Kelly Macdonald
    Kelly Macdonald
    • Elspeth
    Roddy McDonald
    • Rollo
    Daniel Baird
    • Finlay
    Jennifer Fergie
    • Brenda
    Kirstin Smith
    • Meg
    • (as Kirsten Smith)
    Sean Scanlan
    Sean Scanlan
    • Andrew Burns
    John Bett
    • Uncle Crawford
    Anne Lacey
    • Aunt Eunice
    Olivia Preston
    • Debs Haig
    Sarah Turner
    • Ruth Haig
    Moray Hunter
    • Jim Skelly
    • Director
      • Hugh Hudson
    • Writers
      • Denis Forman
      • Simon Donald
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    6.53.2K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    9MissRosa

    A kind family & precocious child in a gentle setting

    Many summaries have described this film's plot as a love triangle that occurs in turn-of-the-century Scotland. Nonsense. What is this tendency to pigeonhole films by the time and place

    in which they occurred? Maybe its because of Hollow-wood's tendency to create shallow "costume dramas." If a film has any merit at all, it is because it TRANSCENDS its setting, and speaks to its audience, whoever and wherever they are.

    "My Life So Far" is a story of the intellectual development of a very bright child. His piecing together and puzzling out of the complex emotions of the people around him, in addition to his own feelings and experiences, and the information he receives via overheard conversations, books, music and so forth are interesting and original and seem totally spontaneous. It is a joy to experience what he experiences.

    The ensemble acting is effortless, especially the child actor, who is so spontaneous and self-absorbed, you feel you are a member of the family, not an onlooker. Production values are sterling. The shots of the huge Scottish castle and its beautiful lands are somehow comforting. (This is neither a child's film, nor an adult's film. "My Life So Far" doesn't really have a niche, and that may be why it has not been widely distributed).

    It is a film to see to renew your memories of being a child and to cause you to meditate on what daily life can be like for a child who is alert, intelligent, and surrounded by love and a good home.
    8MetaLark

    A boy's bittersweet memory of his father

    This is a delightful movie. It's based on a man's nostalgic look backward at a slice of his childhood spent on a Scottish country estate in the 1920s. Narrated by the author as a ten-year-old boy, it recounts a period in which both he and his capricious father learn some important lessons about themselves and about each other.

    There is little plot to speak of--just life unfolding variously in its sweetness and pain, often tinged with a delicious whimsy. Be warned, though, that much as you may be disposed to like the father, he is a flawed man; his pathetic and childish attitudes are often painfully embarrassing to the viewer. Also, sexual references permeate this film, and there is a strong suggestion that youthful sexual curiosity ought to be given free reign. Parents with a contrary view might wish to give it a look before showing it to their children.

    The cinematography is excellent, deftly making the most of the fine Scottish landscape.

    But the music--ah! The music is wonderful, from the first folk-tinged strain, through Beethoven and Saint-Saëns, to the Louis Armstrong ending. Few films are so musically satisfying.

    The role of the childish and inarticulate father, Edward Pettigrew, is nicely developed by Colin Firth. Rosemary Harris is his aristocratic, but good-natured mother-in-law, who actually owns the estate inhabited by her daughter and Edward and their progeny; Harris handles her part with great understanding and humour. The children are natural and believable, and the servants are well-picked and quirky--their kitchen conversations add much warmth to this work.

    For me, the ending credits revealed a lovely surprise: that the reflections of the boy, Fraser Pettigrew, actually come from a memoir written by Sir Denis Forman. I know that name well; Forman is also the author of my favorite opera guide, a cleverly designed, but funny and irreverent book appropriately titled, "The Good Opera Guide." (But don't be put off by the U.S. title, "A Night at the Opera"; it's a wonderful book by any name.)

    Small wonder, then, that this movie has such a fine soundtrack.

    Rating: 8 for the movie, 10 for the opera book.
    10countryway_48864

    The true story of one of the founders of BBC/TV and Chairman of The Royal Opera House, when he was a child growing up in Scotland in 1920

    This is one of the least know, but most charming films I have ever scene.seen.

    Every child deserves to have a father like Edward Pettigrew (Firth). As Frazier describes his father, " Father is an inventer and a genius!!!"

    The film begins with a toddler Frazier, disliking his rest time, decides to have an adventure by crawling around the roof of the family castle in Argyll, Scotland. Father climbs down the steep roof with a rope attached to his waist and rescues wee Frazier, all the while barking like a dog. Frazier, (who makes comments throughout the film), observes that at that time in his life, he and his father ONLY communicated in DOG, the language they both spoke best.

    Naturally the film has a romantic and potentially explosively moment between Father and his brother-in-law's fiance- a 24 year old French muscian who is quite beautiful and charming. She is also very wise for her years and managed to defuse the situation before it blows up. Never-the-less, the wife, played beautifully by Mary Elizabeth Mastreontonio, finds out at a crucial moment in the film and those rock-solid marriage nearly ends at a most tragic time in young Frazier's life.

    But father, being a genius, finds a way to heal the wounds caused by his split-second decision to give in to his baser instincts. The WAY he gets his wife to forgive him and laugh again is pure magic.

    Colin Firth never looked so handsome. Not even his glorious Mr. Darcy is so appealing. This role gives him the opportunity to show all his sides. His glorious, looney sense of humor as well as his gift for drama without words. Here he is active, leaping into a freezing cold Locke, running up and down stairs, inventing things, saving his son, dancing with his wife. He gets to laugh and cry and be HUMAN.

    For those who discovered Colin Firth as Mr. Darcy, My Life So Far is the glorious update!

    My Life So Far in DVD has a place on honor in my collection of over 500 DVD's and VHS' One of my favorites, and, I hope soon to be yours.
    9Arty-4

    Delightful family comedy like they "used to make"

    I saw My Life So Far at a preview screening and loved it. It's a small, modest movie; don't go expecting "Saving Pvt Ryan." But for what it is it's wonderful--like escaping from a fetid city and diving into a clear cool lake.

    It's one of those comedies of family life that both adults and (older) children can enjoy--the kind "they used to make." The ten-year-old narrator doesn't understand a lot of what he sees going on around him (mainly sex), but the audience does. Set in the Scottish highlands in the mid-thirties, it evokes the kind of idyllic life that vanished after the War--a large extended family living in a big ramshackle house on old family property with dogs, servants, neighbors and occasionally an unexpected visitor or two. There's not much story to the film; it's mainly about the rather eccentric characters who inhabit it, and the way they relate to each other.

    The ensemble cast of British, French and American actors is perfect. Especially fine is Colin Firth, who plays the narrator's boyish, sexy and definitely oddball father. Every time I see this actor I marvel at how he manages to display so many conflicting emotions and thoughts while seeming never to move a muscle. And he's gorgeous to look upon, too. Rosemary Harris gives one of her typically fine performances as the boy's grandma, and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio manages to do a great deal with rather little as the boy's mother. Malcolm McDowell is the wealthy uncle with the child bride (Irene Jacob) who is everything that Firth isn't. The tension between them is almost palpable and erupts into a fistfight before the film's end. My only reservation about the acting is with Robbie Norman as the kid; he is cute in a freckle-faced way but not very expressive (especially set beside Firth).

    All in all, I give this film a 9. There's still something to be said for modesty, humor and charm. I wish there were more films like it.
    TxMike

    A nice, entertaining little "gem" of a movie, and great scenery.

    "My Life So Far" is based on a true account of life in a Scottish family between WWI and WWII. It was filmed around Argyll, Scotland, and is certainly a beautiful movie to watch.

    The story is told from a 10-year-old boy's point of view. His rather large family (8 or 10 children) live on the estate of his mother's mother. His dad is a bright man but is a somewhat impractical inventor. The single, rich uncle is threatening to evict them all when the matriarch dies.

    The story unfolds nicely, the father comes to grips with some of his faults, relationships are examined. Music is well-integrated throughout the movie. It ends in a very satisfactory manner.

    This basically "slice of life" movie holds your interest and is overall very entertaining. Not an earth-shaker, I give it a strong "7" of "10", meaning for me that it is better than 70% of the movies out there.

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    Related interests

    Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
    Biography
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film is based on the memoirs of Denis Forman, a British television mogul born 10/13/1917, and is presumed to be set in 1927 when Denis Forman turned 10 years old (the age of Fraser Pettigrew in the film).
    • Goofs
      While Fraser at age 3 crawls out of his bedroom onto the roof, his older brother, young Rollo in short pants with suspenders (in a shot from behind at 02:27), is on the lawn holding a tennis racket, but (at around 28 mins) the scene cuts to a frontal shot where young Rollo's hands are empty. Later (at around 33 mins), he holds the tennis racket again.
    • Quotes

      Fraser Pettigrew: Our house is probably too big, which is why my mum kept having babies so we can keep it filled up.

    • Crazy credits
      Grateful special thanks to the entire Miramax London operation and the people of Stracchur & Cairndow.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: American Pie/My Life So Far/The Blair Witch Project/Arlington Road/Return with Honor (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Symphony No.5 in C Minor, Op.67
      Written by Ludwig van Beethoven (as Beethoven)

      Performed by The City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra

      Conducted by Simon Rattle (as Sir Simon Rattle)

      Sir Simon Rattle performs by courtesy of EMI Classics

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 26, 1999 (Singapore)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Miramax
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • World of Moss
    • Filming locations
      • Ardkinglas House, Cairndow, Argyll and Bute, Scotland, UK
    • Production companies
      • Enigma Productions
      • Hudson Film
      • Miramax
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $635,620
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $53,937
      • Jul 25, 1999
    • Gross worldwide
      • $635,620
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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