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The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry Poster

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

Hope is a journey.
2023 | 108m | English

(6295 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 4 (history)

Director: Hettie Macdonald
Writer: Rachel Joyce
Staring:
Details

Harold Fry is an unremarkable man who has made mistakes with all the important things: being a husband, a father and a friend. And now, well into his 60s, he is content to fade quietly into the background of life. Until, one day – Harold learns his old friend Queenie is dying. Harold leaves home, walking to his post office to send her a letter. And out of the blue, Harold decides to keep walking, all the way to her hospice, 450 miles away.
Release Date: Apr 27, 2023
Director: Hettie Macdonald
Writer: Rachel Joyce
Genres: Drama
Keywords
Production Companies Free Range Films, Embankment Films, Rose Pine Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Jim Broadbent Harold Fry
Penelope Wilton Maureen Fry
Linda Bassett Queenie
Earl Cave David Fry
Joseph Mydell Rex
Bethan Cullinane Young Maureen Fry
Nina Singh Garage Girl
Monika Gossmann Martina
Claire Rushbrook Farmer’s Wife
Nick Sampson Silver Haired Man
Adam Jackson-Smith Young Harold Fry
Andrew Leung GP
Joy Richardson Sister Philomena
Daniel Frogson Wilf
Jessica Kaur Barista
Maanuv Thiara Mick the Blogger
Naomi Wirthner Kate
Ian Porter Jim the Oncologist
Alyson Marks Woman with Shopping
Duggie Brown Dog Walker
Tigger Blaize Postman
Marvin Brown Pizza Delivery Man
Trevor Fox Kind Man
David Gennard Press Photographer
Howard Grace Mobile Home Man
Braxton Kolodny David Fry, aged 10
Brian Male Dressing Gown Man
Georgia Nicholson Manageress
Lucy Reynolds Waitress
Jazz Shergill Selfie Girl
Nick Sampson Silver Haired Gentleman
Bogdan Silaghi Waiting Truck Driver
Leila Temirzhanova Superhero Girl
Georgina Strawson Driver
Name Job
Hettie Macdonald Director
Rachel Joyce Writer, Novel
Kate McCullough Director of Photography
Ilan Eshkeri Original Music Composer
Name Title
Kevin Loader Producer
Marilyn Milgrom Producer
Juliet Dowling Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 20 35 11
2024 5 17 24 12
2024 6 17 35 11
2024 7 17 36 9
2024 8 12 20 8
2024 9 13 19 9
2024 10 12 18 8
2024 11 10 19 7
2024 12 11 20 8
2025 1 10 16 7
2025 2 8 13 3
2025 3 5 13 1
2025 4 1 3 1
2025 5 1 3 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 1 1 0
2025 8 1 3 0
2025 9 8 14 3
2025 10 6 9 4

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
N/A

"Harold" (Jim Broadbent) is having breakfast with his wife "Maureen" (Dame Penelope Wilton) when he opens a letter. It turns out to be from a colleague from the brewery in which he worked and it mentions that she is in an hospice, terminally ill with cancer. He pens the briefest of replies and sets ... off to post the letter. En route, he pops into the local garage for a pint of milk and encounters a young girl with blue hair (Nina Singh) who urges him not to lose hope. Her words have quite an effect. He decides to post his letter in the next post box, then the next. The next thing we know he in on a trek some 450-odd miles from their home in Devon to Berwick-upon-Tweed. That's about as far as he can actually walk without entering Scotland! Along the way he encounters some interesting characters whilst fighting a bit of a rear guard action with his bewildered wife at home (via the phone) and we are also, gradually, introduced to flashbacks illustrating the tragedy both went through with their own increasingly wayward son "David" (Earl Cave). This is a powerful tour-de-force from Broadbent. As the journey develops, his character exudes a gritty determination alongside an humanity that is touching and engaging. Dame Penelope really only features sparingly, almost like a steam valve to let us all take a breather from the intensity of the march - and that works to a certain extent, but unfortunately I found the substance of the story a bit lacking. It works better when it is just him, but as he meets and attracts hangers-on, then melodrama creeps in and increasingly diverts the theme into a rather disappointing vein of stereotype and hippiedom. There is also an implausible degree of serendipity to bits of this - as illustrated by his encounters with "Martina" (Monika Gossmann) and a cancer surgeon in a tea room. Still, I bet he hadn't met too many men who liked to lick their younger boyfriend's leaky trainers - and that, amongst other scenes, does inject a degree of humour (and an opportunity for this actor to use his hugely expressive face) to this travelogue with a difference. It felt long, not as long as his walk, but it could have maybe lost twenty minutes to keep it from meandering. There is some lovely, scenic, photography to enjoy which makes a cinema screening preferable, but it will do equally well on the telly. Characterful certainly but just a bit, well, plodding.

Apr 13, 2023