A kindAlthough the main character in this romantic story should have been 18 years old, the film released by Sky Movies is clearly aimed at a younger market, with its asexual storyline and the morality of being a good girl.Of course, the plot is as old as Cracker Jack. It revolves around Finley (Ross Reed), a healthy blond ordinary child, an aspiring violinist, coming to the countryside Ireland I went abroad for a semester from New York and fell in love with the baby-faced movie star Beckett (Jedidiah Goodacre).
But the filmmakers took great pains to decorate it with some modern details. For example, Beckett (who inexplicably has a surname like all American characters) is making a fantasy film series in the style of Game of Thrones in Ireland. At the same time, Finley was forced by her Irish studies teacher to associate with a local elder. She assigned her a messy old Biddy Catherine (Vanessa Redgrave, no less than) to read Twilight novels. Therefore, both of these quotes allow the film to name other romantic texts that this crowd likes—and at the same time make fun of them a bit.
In general, Ireland is incredibly joyous, star-studded, all the way down to the local homeless drunk (Patrick Bergin) who taught Finley to play from the heart Of violinists, but there are also some nods to the harsher reality of life. It turns out that Catherine is regarded by the whole city as a pariah because she allegedly stole her sister’s sweetheart and married him. She really wants to save her brothers and sisters from abusive marriages by sacrificing herself. (Perhaps this should be an accurate act of abuse?) Correspondingly, Beckett’s manager and father Montgomery (played by Tom Everett Scott) ended up exploiting his children’s talents and reputation for personal gain. And be exposed.
But these small gravels were finally smoothed out in the pearly sentimentality, and the noodles with flute and violin played in the soundtrack eased.



