This is a gentle, innocent film about the reflections of an aging man, who returns to his home town after the death of his best friend. Memories of life at age 11 floods back as it was a magical time that changed his life. Three 11 year old children (Bobby, Carol, and Sully) share their lives. Carol and Bobby have a special affection for one another including sharing a kiss “by which all others will be measured”. Bobby lives with his mother, a bitter, vain woman who looks for pleasures for herself without sharing much with her son. Into their lives comes a mysterious new boarder, who befriends the boy but generates distrust from the mother. As time passes, the man and boy share confidences and special powers are revealed. The man warns the boy to be on the lookout for the “lowmen”, who were seeking him. The two share a summer’s adventures and come to love one another before the inevitable happens. A confrontation with a school bully also changes everyone. –IMDb
Robert Scott Hicks (born 4 March 1953) is a film director from Australia. He is best known as the screenwriter and director of Shine, the Oscar-winning biopic of pianist David Helfgott. Hicks’s work has been nominated for an Academy Award as well as winning an Emmy Award.
Hicks was born in Uganda, the son of a homemaker and a civil engineer. He lived in Kenya, just outside Nairobi, until the age of ten. His family then moved, first to England and, when he was 14, on to Adelaide, South Australia. Though British citizens, his father and grandfather were born in Burma and the West Indies respectively, and spent their lives in far-flung locales as civil engineers building railways, bridges and harbours. His mother is Scottish. Scott lives with his wife and collaborator/producer Kerry Heysen in Adelaide, where they maintain their own Yacca Paddock Vineyard on the Fleurieu Peninsula. Their two sons, Scott and Jethro also live in Adelaide.
Hicks graduated from Flinders University… read more
Although it is occasionally deadened by forced sentimentality, Hearts in Atlantis is a heartbreaking film. Not only does the heightened sensation of nostalgia serve as a backdrop for dark themes; the two are intrinsically tied together. Hicks's use of subdued (often absent) artificial lighting and picturesque framing enhances the film's focus on childhood as a dreamlike state. Hopkins and Yelchin are superb.
A masterpiece of camara, writer and Actor, well Actors, as the whole cast brought the flim to my heart, with lots of laughter and tears every word a flim in its own right. Anthony Hopkins plays as Ted Brautigan an old gentleman who moves in to the appartment above Bobby Garfield and his mum, and befriends the young lad with paranormal consequences Anton Yelchin, Mika Boorem and David Morse have to be mentioned to