Hearts in Atlantis (2001) Poster

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8/10
GREAT FILM!!!!
dan_in_denver20 September 2002
This movie was a great surprise! I never read the Stephen King novel that this film comes from, but as always, King has crafted an intriguing and absorbing story.

Anthony Hopkins never disappoints and his performance as Ted Brautigan here is no different.

Brautigan lives upstairs from young Bobby Garfield and his widowed mother and a friendship soon develops between Bobby and Ted. Bobby knows that there is something different about Ted, and the bond between them grows when Bobby starts uncovering some of Ted's secrets. Bobby's father passed away when he was very young and he has no knowledge of who his father was except the word of his neglectful mother that his father was a drunkard and gambler. Bobby, through Ted learns a lot about his father, and more importantly, himself.

I don't want to give away too much of the plot of this wonderful movie, especially if like me you have not read the book. This is a thoughtful, insightful, well written and well acted movie and is definitely a part of my own library.

Dont miss Hearts in Atlantis.. you will be sorry if you do!! 8/10
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7/10
Hearts in Atlantis: Magical enough to be enjoyable, not magical enough to standout
Platypuschow27 March 2018
Hearts in Atlantis is another Stephen King adaptation I wasn't aware of, it stars Anthony Hopkins, David Morse, and the taken before his time Anton Yelchin.

It tells the story of a small bullied boy, his father has passed away and his mother isn't fullfilling her duties as a parent. When a mysterious man appears in his life everything changes.

I had no idea what to expect but was quickly gripped, it was standard King stuff from small town America to flashbacks of youth to that wonderful charm they all seem to have.

The movie immediatly whispers sweet promises in your ear, you know something is coming and you'll expect it to be big! Sadly it doesn't entirely deliver, in fact I found the big "Revelation" very underwhelming. Don't get me wrong it was okay but not on the level I had expected.

Hearts in Atlantis is a beautiful quaint little tale, but is not one of those big epic life changing experiences that occasionally cross our paths.

The Good:

Cast are on point

Looks and sounds wonderful

Very charming

The Bad:

The twist is very weak

Feels like it should have been better

Things I Learnt From This Movie:

Anthony Hopkins simply can do no wrong can he?
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7/10
King, Hopkins Make For Resonant Film
bigtommytahoe16 June 2005
One of the many acting skills Anthony Hopkins possesses is the ability to attract and disturb at the same time; he can charm you to no end with sly smiles and unspoken allure. But all the while he's hiding something unsettling that you can't ever quite figure out. In Hearts in Atlantis, the latest of what by now must be a truly massive box set of Stephen King film adaptations, Sir Anthony finds a writer perfectly suited to these unique talents. What we see is a movie eerie and enchanting, both in mood and in style -- a story that holds onto its cards throughout, letting you see each of them slowly, one by one, and only when absolutely necessary. In the end we find we have been held captive by a stunningly memorable and powerful film.

The story begins as a retrospective: Robert Morse plays the older version of Bobby Garfield, the central character of this reminiscent story. It takes a recent tragedy to send the older Bobby unwittingly in the mind to his days as an 11-year-old in 1960. There we go to a place common to almost all of King's stories: rural New England, where Bobby lives with his mother (Hope Davis), and spends his innocent, aimless days with his two friends Sully (Will Rothhaar) and Carol (Mika Boorem). His father died when Bobby was only five, and his mother is so busy hopefully tending to a real estate career that she has little time to tend to her only child. To this point nothing is out of the ordinary; this childhood is deliberately portrayed with hazy, warm undertones, akin to the sense of youth so familiar to many who look back upon it.

Fairly early on we meet Ted Brautigan (Hopkins), a boarder who shows up quite suddenly on their porch, his belongings in grocery bags. He is clean, well-spoken, unobtrusive and generally a placid sort. But he is also an instant enigma: he is of unknown origin, means, and intent, and Bobby's mother quickly decides this is a man to be viewed with caution. Bobby, on the other hand, innocently curious --and most likely desperate for anything that could spell the boredom of his uneventful summer-- decides this a man worth knowing. They become close, Brautigan dispersing kennels of wisdom and even offering young Bobby a dollar a week and cold root beers to read him the newspaper daily. But Brautigan clearly has a special quality about him: he can sense things and see things that are not readily apparent to most others. Bobby seems to have this gift as well, though in a lees pronounced way, and through this they form a bond, one Bobby's mother slowly and begrudgingly affords him. She's suspicious of this man still, while we the viewers begin gradually to glean some of the mysteries of his past. I don't dare say what they are, but they do involve "the Low Men", people, Brautigan warns Bobby, who may some day come looking for him. He tells Bobby what signs to look for about town, gently using the boy as a scout of imminent danger. Bobby does not know who they are or what they represent. Neither do we, for a long time, but the key instrument of this story is to make it intentionally vague. We are not to be concerned about these details, but rather to know that Brautigan has experienced them, and will do whatever he can to shield Bobby and his youth from the corrupting darkness looming behind them.

Stephen King has been widely read as an author of horror and suspense, but his best works --like this one-- work on a much more insidious level, evoking a sense of foreboding and unknown that manages to inform everything that happens within. The makers of this film find great success emphasizing the shady murkiness of the story, and they still manage to keep things centered. The mysteries of Ted Brautigan find parallels in the wonders of youth: Bobby experiences his first kiss, naturally, encounters a menacing bully, and learns to view his mother in evolving ways...grown-up ways. This is really a story of innocence and maturity, of youth's purity and the dangers that lurk at its end. Bobby finds that end to a certain degree, but along the way finds friendship, knowledge, and a sense of the mysteries of adulthood that await him. Ted Brautigan is really more than a friend to Bobby; he is a guide, a protector, and a teacher. These two actors provide real, natural on screen chemistry in this film, and there is one delightful scene early on where Brautigan intensely relives for Bobby a glory day of Chicago Bears football lore. This is an actor who can take any available strengths of writing and magnify them for us viewers who watch him say them aloud. As a result Anthony Hopkins anchors this infectious little film to the ground while still allowing it to soar skyward when needed.
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"The kiss by which all others will be measured..."
cfisanick11 September 2001
Sure to be one of the best-loved films of this fall, "Hearts in Atlantis" adapted from Stephen King's best seller mines a lot of familiar territory from "Stand by Me," but that beloved film is a good model. In "Stand by Me," it was a writer reflecting back on the childhood summer "when we found the body," here it's David Morse as a photographer remembering the summer of his eleventh year "when Ted the boarder moved upstairs." Downplaying King's supernatural elements, this film slowly, but surely, builds to an emotional payoff every bit as moving as the end of Rob Reiner's gem.

This is a small, gentle film with lots of character development and period atmosphere. The tech credits such as production design and cinematography are superb and bring to life a time--1960--which, for some of us, was not that long ago. The child-actors are perfectly cast, and Anthony Hopkins as the mysterious stranger gives one of his best, most-heartfelt performances. (This guy could read USA Today weather forecasts aloud and make them sound like Shakespeare.) While others may have taken a radically different approach to the material, emphasizing action and suspense, I think screenwriter William ("Misery") Goldman and director Scott ("Shine," "Snow Falling on Cedars") Hicks ultimately hit the right notes. I will interested in seeing if this decidedly low-key approach strikes a box office chord with moviegoers frazzled by the big, dumb summer action films. If there's any fairness left in the world it will. It's that good.
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6/10
Odd But Enchanting Adaptation Of One-Fifth Of A Stephen King Book
ShootingShark7 August 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Eleven-year-old Bobby Garfield lives in New England in 1960, with his mother and his friends Carol and Sully. Ted Brautigan, a strange old man, moves into the rooms upstairs and the two become good friends, but Bobby soon discovers Ted is on the run from some sinister figures known only as The Low Men ...

This is a charming little movie which doesn't really have much of a plot, it's just about a friendship between a boy and an old man. It is extraordinarily rich in character though, and the four leads all step into their roles perfectly. It's also an exquisitely well-made period-piece of the time, by which I mean to say everything looks right - the clothes, the hairstyles, the cars, the furniture and so on - without ever drawing your attention to the fact. It's based on a great book by Stephen King which is really five separate stories with lots of linking themes and characters, all centred around the Vietnam war. The movie is really only the first story in the novel, Low Men In Yellow Coats, so if you want to find out more about Bobby, Carol and Sully, please read the book (though be warned it's not too cheery). Eloquently scripted by William Goldman, and featuring a great atmospheric score by Mychael Danna. Beautifully photographed in Virginia by Piotr Sobocinski, who sadly died not long after its completion.
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7/10
A movie that made me remember
Willie-126 October 2001
I saw Hearts in Atlantis last night, and I have to say that the more I think about it, the more I like it. After it was over, I couldn't help but remember my "Atlantis." The town in which I grew up in was certainly one of the best places in world. I lived there from the time I was born, until I was 18. Hearts in Atlantis made me remember what it was like to be a kid, and to really not have a care in the world (except what time all my friends were going to meet to play football or baseball). Of course I understand now that there is much more to life then riding bikes and playing games, but a part of me wishes I could go back, just for one more day. I loved when the Hopkins character explained how when you're a kid a day could last forever, and the place in which you lived seemed almost like a paradise...like Atlantis must have seemed. This movie made me remember my "Atlantis," and I am glad that I saw it.
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7/10
leaves you feeling that the story was cut short.
CharltonBoy2 November 2002
Warning: Spoilers
Having read the short story by Stephen King , the film is fairly true to the book and like the book it leaves you with a feeling of "that was good but is that it?" I have a theory that when King wrote the story he hoped it would lead to a novel but for some reason or another it was cut short much like the film and book. In the film you are left with no doubt that the Lowmen are real but in the film you never know if it is part of the boy's imagination or if they are police and the old man is on the run from them. The book also focuses on the Supernatural side of the story the film does not and i would suspect makes it feel quite slow for some viewer's. Hopkins is great as usual , as is the boy , Anton Yelchin and the latter has a great career ahead of him. One thing that does come from this is that i usually always enjoy Castle Rock productions is this is no different. 7 out of 10.
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9/10
A big, fat 'wow'
wezzel6 January 2003
For some, Stephen King is just a mere auteur of horror stories. If you look closer, you'll see he is much more. Nearly all his stories are melancholic tales about the loss of childhood innocence. With a paranormal twist, but that really isn't the most important. I even think that Hearts in Atlantis would have worked even better, if the whole paranormal thing would have been left out. The most interesting aspects of the story are Bobby Garfield and his relationship with his mother, girlfriend and Ted. Whenever Ted brought up the low-men, my personal interest curve got a bit of a dip, but hey it's a Stephen King movie, I guess we'll have to live with it.

As it is, Hearts in Atlantis remains a wonderful film. It's the kind of film where the scenes in the present are filmed in gloomy blue and grey tones, and all the flashbacks get a golden sepia treatment. Sure it's been done before, but rarely have the effects been of such a shattering beauty.

Anthony Hopkins, never shy of giving a bombastic performance, is remarkably soft-spoken in this one, though I doubt that he was really interested in this movie. The star of the show, however, is Anton Yelchin as Bobby Garfield. He looks like the young Elijah Wood, with the same angelic blue eyes, and he's truly captivating. He even has genuine chemistry with the girl that plays his love interest. A big fat ‘wow' is in order here, let's hope he'll get the chance to exploit his talents further.

It's a shame this movie failed at the box-office, but then again so did The Shawshank Redemption. So let's all rent/buy this wonderful film, and boost that IMDb score.

I gave this one a 9/10.
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7/10
A Nice Movie
MickeyTheConstant22 August 2020
I enjoyed this movie but something felt just a bit missing. I think it could have done with another 30 mins or so and a bit more backstory on Hopkins character as well as a bit more what happened after. I felt like it finished too quick. Had potential to score much higher. A nice coming of age story with a big of King's supernatural thrown in.
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9/10
Wouldn't've missed a minute of it.
D_n16 March 2003
To many, Stephan King is a well of horror, Lovecraftian chill that creeps upon us in the dead of night. So when his fantasy of insight comes along, they are struck blind, disappointed, let down by the mildness of the tale.

Director Hicks, screenplay writer Goldman, and the superlative team of Mr. Hopkins and young Yelchin have brought alive this artist's touch of Mr. King, in a finely crafted, sensitive film that just departs from the four walls of our mundane reality. In many subtle touches throughout the film, we -- even those of us Constant Readers who would read Mr. King's laundry list if he published it -- are guided through Goldman's skillful adaptation of the original novel.

Better than the book? Worse? No, this humble viewer will just say that the film can stand on its own, if we are just willing to let our eyes be opened to what can be.
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6/10
Many parts do not make a whole
russjones-8088718 June 2020
Set in the early 1960's, an eleven-year old boy lives with his widowed mother. To make ends meet she takes in an older man as a boarder. The man,who apparently has psychic powers, confides in the boy that he is on the run and a friendship is formed.

Based on a Stephen King novella with an authentic 1960s feel. However, it is a series of individual incidents without being a whole and leaves many questions unanswered. Anthony Hopkins stars as the man with Anton Yelchin and Hope Davis as the boy and his mother.
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9/10
Loved it every time I've watched it
Maleplatypus8 September 2011
It's been many years now but every once in a while I go through this story/movie again, bringing up the same emotions and fondness of it. This movie is nothing spectacular, not a major hit by any standards, but personal experience for intelligent and thoughtful people. Behind it is some brilliant work of Mr. King (at his best, when not writing horror stories), which makes him (for me, at least) one of the best writers America ever had. And this story has been told through an excellent movie, with carefully picked up cast, to give probably their best, yet simple, performances. It is a very smooth movie, very well and sensibly directed. I'm highly recommending it but not to everyone - just to the ones who know how to appreciate a little masterpiece. To them it will be timeless. Everyone else – just forget it.
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7/10
VERY underrated film!
wrushrd30 June 2022
Anthony Hopkins gives a stellar performance as always--the whole movie was well crafted and meaningful. I can see why Sir Hopkins wanted to do this film, and why he considered it "gentle" and "heartwarming".
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1/10
Boring with capital B
cdrw6229 September 2001
Great cure for insomnia. Where to begin... pointless story, terrible script, and the worst performance by a kid actor in a lead role since Nathan Watt in "Unstrung Heroes". One of those films I wish I could sue to get my ticket money and 2 hours back. Very disappointed.
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The wonders of youth viewed through a prism
Craig_McPherson3 January 2003
There are two distinct dimensions to Stephen King's writing. On the one hand he is most widely known as the horror meister who can churn out novels quicker than most of us can go through toilet paper. Then there is the King who knows when to leave the schlock behind and tell a good, character driven, yarn.

This is the King who penned Hearts in Atlantis, along with similar captivating stories turned into film such as Stand By Me, The Shawshank Redemption and The Green Mile.

Told in flashback, it is the story of a young boy who is mentored by a psychically gifted border (Hopkins) with a shadowy past who is renting the upstairs room in his mother's house. He instructs the boy to be on the lookout for the "low men" who are persuing him. It tells the story of lives and loves lost in the fleeting wonder of youth. Filled with metaphor, this is a gem of a film. View it for the acting. View it for the cinematography. View it for the art direction. View it for the directing. But most of all, view it for the wonderful story that it is. It will captivate you and leave you wishing it would go on forever.
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7/10
All well and good and feel-good and not very demanding, but great acting
secondtake6 May 2016
Hearts in Atlantis (2001)

A nostalgia dipped story about childhood memories and a young boy (and his two friends) struggling for their places in their young world. By its nature, and with the support of some terrific acting, the story will move you. But it is also a somewhat simplified idea of a boy looking for stability and friendship without a father and with a mother more interested in her questionable career.

Writer Stephen King knows how to get a series of hooks going in a story, and the one supernatural twist here is that leading man Ted, played by Anthony Hopkins, can read minds. (This has apparently led him to enormous wins at poker, which has made him a target of angry mobsters, though this part of the story is left sketchy.) The boy senses something special in Ted, and their friendship grows to where Ted begins to look out for the boy, protecting and guiding him.

And so this is filmed in the late 1950s (or maybe 1960, judging by the most recent cars), and it has a little sweet aura to it all. There is an overlay in contemporary times that is unnecessary, though it wraps things up nicely for people who like that. It's all enjoyable but not very deep or even, surprisingly, very surprising.
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6/10
An average movie.Based on a great book.
morrison-dylan-fan27 November 2005
Warning: Spoilers
After finally getting round to seeing this,i have to say i am a bit disappointed by this film.The book is one of my favourites that has been written.While some people complain about bits that get taken out when you get book-to-screen.I have to say that i think its best to try to view both apart from each other. The plot:

Bobby Gartfiel (David"Green Mile" Morse)returns to his hometown for a funeral of a childhood friend.While he is there he thinks back to the Summer of 1960.At some point that summer,a stranger Ted Brauitgen (Antony Hopkins) comes into town,and stayer's in a flat next to Bobby and his mother.During the summer Bobby and Ted build a strong relationship with each-other,and Ted helps a young Bobby (Anton Yelchin) with a girl he is in love with Carol (Mika Boorem).Everything seams to be going great,Till some "McCarthyish" types of people come to the town looking for Ted. View on the film:

While the acting in the film is fine (Hopkins,Yelchin and Boorem are the stand outs),the main problem seams to be the screenplay,written by the usually great William "Buch and Sundance"Goldman.The friend that has died,is not given very strong relationships so you cant have any feeling of sadness that he has died. Final view: An above-average film,based on a fantastic book by Stephen King.
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6/10
Title A Misnomer As It Only Focuses On One Book Story
zkonedog12 March 2017
At face value, this is a decent film. The relationship between Bobby Garfield and Carol Gerber (a brilliant performance from Mika Boreem)) is the centerpiece of the film, and will really tug at your heartstrings as the film comes to a close. Also, the eccentric Ted Brautigan is perfectly cast in Anthony Hopkins, while Bobby's mother Liz Garfield adds a dark aspect. So, all in all, the film is a decent little story that, while never really resolving itself fully, does capture your interest and really make you feel for the protagonists.

However, titling the film "Hearts in Atlantis" in trying to capture the essence of Stephen King's masterful novel was an injustice to King's original story, which tells 5-6 different stories and weaves recurring characters into each. In fact, the "Hearts" in the title of King's book is actually a play on words for the card game that Carol Gerber's college friends play relentlessly, day and night.

Thus, this film really should have been called "Low Men In Yellow Coats", as that is the King tale that really is being told. Even if that would have happened, though, I think that telling this singular tale does a great injustice to King's great novel. Whereas in the book the story just sets the stage for the drama to come, the film tries its best to inject that drama into only the one story, which is sad. A great attempt is made to do so, but ultimately it will leave you wanting, as it seems (for much of the film) that it is building towards a bigger resolution that never comes.

If you read the book, I wouldn't spend too much time/effort acquiring this film, as it doesn't come close to equaling the success of the original novel. However, if you didn't read the book and are a sucker for a good love story, you very well may like this movie much more than I.
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10/10
A breath of fresh air
TexMetal4JC29 September 2001
Warning: Spoilers
Hearts in Atlantis is an interesting movie. For one, it is based upon a story contained within a book named "Hearts in Atlantis" by Stephen King. But the story is called "Low Men in Yellow Coats" and the story "Hearts in Atlantis" has absolutely no bearing on the movie at all.

It's rather unfortunate actually, that the film makers couldn't find some way to incorporate all five of King's "Hearts in Atlantis" stories into the movie. But if they had to pick one - which they did, of course - "Low Men in Yellow Coats" is an excellent choice. And it makes for an excellent movie, but the book should be required reading.

Some of the complaints about the movie have been that the characters are not well developed. Perhaps they are, but as someone who's read the book, my mind filled in any gaps, so I couldn't say. In fact, knowing what was in the story did nothing but enrich this film. Because the movie was so close to the book, the background information supplied by King's plot filled in all the places the movie could not or would not go.

One bad aspect of the movie version however, is the elimination of all supernatural elements. Instead of making Anthony Hopkins' character a Breaker from the Dark Tower universe King has created, like Brautigan is in the book, he is a psychic sought by the FBI to root out communists (hey, this is 1960 after all). So the string is still intact: Of the more than 30 movies based on the work of Stephen King, not a single one even mentions the Dark Tower.

How unfortunate.

The movie itself is simply wonderful, especially after dealing with two weeks of absolute crap (The Musketeer and Glitter? Hmmm).

Anthony Hopkins has the pleasure of two Academy Award-worthy performances in 2001 (I don't care, Hannibal was still an excellent movie). His performance in Hearts is as understated as Hannibal was... well... Hannibal. He keeps to himself, stays quiet, and when he talks, he is close to divine. Hopkins continues to prove why he is one of the best actors of all time.

Anton Yelchin is simply amazing as little Bobby Garfield. He is the second coming of Haley Joel Osment, if not better than he. The plot is good if not great - although with the book already in mind, it assuredly makes any potential holes disappear - and the character development is superb. And isn't that a wonderful breath of fresh air after a summer's worth of movies that were cool, and some were even good, but overall brainless and similar.

For that alone, I give it a 10, even if it is perhaps closer to an 8 or a 9.

10/10
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6/10
superb acting, very persuasive scenes
jeroenberndsen123 August 2002
I don't quite understand the average of a 6.8.... In my opinion this film is a high standard, dramatic production with an astonishing magical performance of Hopkins and the youngster, Anton velchin if I remembered correctly. Upcoming star I tell you, and if he won't, it's not because of his potential.

With some tearjerking scenes, which are not over dramatized, this is a great movie to watch with your lover, close to each other, desperately trying to hide your occasional tears.

Both the score and the cinematography play a good part in swallowing you up in the situations at hand.

I give it an 8.6.
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9/10
Delightful and nostalgic
jhrnchia4 October 2001
This film made me think of films like "Stand By Me" and "My Girl". It was a quiet film, rather a relief from the raucous, action-filled movies of today or the silly fluff of many others. A wonderful exploration the a child growing up, his friendships, first love and challenges he faces. The boys performance was very believable, and Sir Anthony Hopkins, as always, is wonderful. My husband and I thoroughly enjoyed this film.
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6/10
STILL, THOSE CHAPTERS ON THE BOOK WOULD MAKE THIS A FANTASTIC MOVIE
nickpar23 August 2002
Well, it is a classic Hollywood conversion of a book really worth reading.

I personally believe that the info on the characters and the plot could hardly be transferred on a movie unless this had a duration of 4 hours, at least.

Nevertheless, i was left with the impression after watching the movie that somebody had "stolen" the other chapters.

I will be rather strict on this : my rating is 6 / 10.
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9/10
An Unusual Fugitive
bkoganbing8 April 2009
If anyone is looking for some typical Stephen King fare with lots of blood and vividly imagined monsters, Hearts of Atlantis is not your film. If however your taste runs to well acted drama about growing up in the early sixties Hearts of AAtlantis is definitely the film for you. Although it's not stated my gut tells me that this tale is somewhat autobiographical.

David Morse comes back to the small town he grew up in to attend the funeral of a friend killed in action, presumably Kuwait during Desert Storm. He also learns that his first girl friend also passed on a few years earlier. They were a trio that hung out and did things together as kids. Morse's mind wanders back to those innocent days when Anton Yelchin as young Morse, Will Rothhaar as the man who was killed as a youngster and Mika Boorem as the girl friend are all of eleven.

Yelchin lives with his mother Hope Davis, a woman made bitter by the split between her and Yelchin's father. Into their lives comes a mysterious boarder whom Davis takes in because she needs the money, but remains suspicious. The stranger is Anthony Hopkins and he and Yelchin form a bond.

Hopkins is a fugitive, but not in the usual sense. As we discover he's got powers and abilities far beyond those of ordinary men which are in the mind reading field. It's a gift and a curse and Hopkins is wanted by some mysterious strangers who want to make use of his abilities. Presumably this is the Central Intelligence Agency.

Hearts in Atlantis is a tender and loving film that is made by the performances of Anthony Hopkins and the juvenile cast around him. Best scene in the film is Hopkins defusing a confrontation between Yelchin and friends and a school bully played by Timothy Reifsnyder. Hopkins reads Reifsnyder and tells him things about himself he would not want known, but they do ring true and play into the pathology of bullying.

This is an absolute must see films, one of the best screen performances by Anthony Hopkins on film.
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7/10
Recommended, a fine film
wuzupn_tb8 December 2002
This is not bad. Steven King isn't a GREAT writer, but he's not the least bit...bad. The movie is a solid B film. I thought about giving it a B-, but then I looked back at the movie's ending. The theme. The whole childhood innocence theme reassured the movie's good grade. The whole thing is dramatic as hell, and you'll find yourself sucked in and loving it. B, 7/10
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1/10
I hated this movie.
steve8817 May 2002
I had to see this movie twice(once with my parents, once with my friends) and it got worse the second time I saw it. My friend read the book by Stephen King and at first I didn't believe him when he told me about it because it was so different.

Anyway, I almost fell asleep. It was really boring. Nothing really happened. I expected to be seeing a supernatural thriller. The trailers made it seem that way. His powers didn't have anything to do with the movie.

There was also a really cheesy part. This is a sort of crucial moment so... He was running up the a hill carrying his friend "against all odds" and it was like he was a famous line backer or quarter back or something that the "psychic guy" told him about. Snore.
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