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IMDbPro

Fran

  • 1985
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
132
YOUR RATING
Fran (1985)
Fran: Phone Box
Play clip1:50
Watch Fran: Phone Box
1 Video
2 Photos
Drama

A single mother, Fran (Noni Hazlehurst) is selflessly devoted to her children. But something is lacking in her life, and that something is the love of a man her own age. Her efforts to juggl... Read allA single mother, Fran (Noni Hazlehurst) is selflessly devoted to her children. But something is lacking in her life, and that something is the love of a man her own age. Her efforts to juggle a love life with her home life are largely unsuccessful.A single mother, Fran (Noni Hazlehurst) is selflessly devoted to her children. But something is lacking in her life, and that something is the love of a man her own age. Her efforts to juggle a love life with her home life are largely unsuccessful.

  • Director
    • Glenda Hambly
  • Writer
    • Glenda Hambly
  • Stars
    • Noni Hazlehurst
    • Annie Byron
    • Alan Fletcher
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    132
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Glenda Hambly
    • Writer
      • Glenda Hambly
    • Stars
      • Noni Hazlehurst
      • Annie Byron
      • Alan Fletcher
    • 5User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Fran: Phone Box
    Clip 1:50
    Fran: Phone Box

    Photos1

    View Poster

    Top cast30

    Edit
    Noni Hazlehurst
    Noni Hazlehurst
    • Fran
    Annie Byron
    • Marge
    Alan Fletcher
    Alan Fletcher
    • Jeff
    Narelle Simpson
    • Lisa
    Travis Ward
    • Tom
    Rosie Logie
    • Cynthia
    Danny Adcock
    • Ray
    Steve Jodrell
    Steve Jodrell
    • Michael Butlin
    Penny Brown
    • Sally Aspinal
    Faith Clayton
    • Waigani Supervisor
    Richard Tulloch
    • Peter Cook
    Colin McEwan
    • Graham Brooks
    Rosemary Harrison
    • Carol Brooks
    Paul Della-Marta
    • Tony Simpson
    Tina Wundenberg
    • Annie Simpson
    Ross Coli
    • Weed
    Ken Smith
    • Mr. Pearce
    Bruno Napolitano
    • Deli Owner
    • Director
      • Glenda Hambly
    • Writer
      • Glenda Hambly
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews5

    6.4132
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    Featured reviews

    petershelleyau

    call her irresponsible, but nobody could love her children as much as ...

    Australian writer/director Glenda Hambly presents the title character, flaws and all, a mother who acts to effectively abandon her children in favor of a romantic life. However what saves Fran from condemnation is the great empathy created by the performance of Noni Hazelhurst. Hazelhurst isn't afraid to present Fran as stupid or ugly or child-like, her desperation highlighted in the scene where she begs her husband not to leave her alone with her children in suburbia. She also makes Fran's anger at the child welfare agency she calls the "Department of Good Intentions" funny, revealing an arrested development based on her own history of being a foster child.

    Hambly's sad tale portrays the repetitive nature of abuse, with Fran acting the same way her mother did, and the accusation that her new boyfriend Jeff (Alan Fletcher) having abused Fran's eldest daughter Lisa (Narelle Simpson) aligned with Fran telling us that Jeff's father abused him. In the final image of Lisa, Hambly also suggests that she too will continue the cycle. The treatment stops us from viewing Fran as a tragic victim, since we don't see her trying to work whilst her children are at school, when her pride makes her refuse her to accept government support. The misanthropy of Fran's neighbor, Marg (Annie Byron, also an abandoned mother, doesn't progress into lesbianism, but whilst Marg's assessment of the men in Fran's life is correct, it still reads as a sign of resignation by Marg. Misguided Fran's priorities may be, but the idea that she needs a individual life apart from her children is valid.

    The lighting in a fight scene is perhaps too dark to conceal the violence, but later Hazelhurst looks incredibly beautiful in a moment of reaction to Jeff.
    8videorama-759-859391

    Fran-tastic

    These were great, these movies, back in the day. Now we don't see these kind of Ozzie greats, anymore, films of such frank realism and Fran is basically one of these that stares you straight in the face, and it's quite impossible to look away. I really like this movie a lot, and again we're reminded of just what a powerfully great actress, Noni is. She plays a mother, whose had a really bad trot through life, and has been through the wars. As a kid she was fostered out, and in a cruel irony, she had fostered one of her own kids out, her older kid daughter. She manages 3 kids, her real piece of s..t hubby is in prison. Her current, abusive ass...e boyfriend, Ray, and father figure to her kids, who she hardly sees, is away, mining. Her solace and relief is in her best friend, next door, Marge (Byron) a wise survivor, and former wife of Ray's, so it seems, which for her, has put a damper of critical cynicism of all men. Fran is a mess, a mother, of irresponsibility, the bottle, and abandonment. She does night pub prowls, a sex magnet to the naked male eye, looking for a new man, and sights her next one (a familiar Neighbors face) a relief, but one of misfortune later, you'll find out. This is a very entertaining drama, with some sad/verge tearing moments. It starts off with flavor in it's opening, involving a stalking creep. The film is really well made, and has great, real acting, Noni again, is great as always, but it's the confronting, sheer raw realism of the film that bites you on the a..s. Fran has another Oz 80'S which warrants, and deserves your attention, especially fans of Oz pics. Colorfully entertaining drama, that you can't turn away from.
    3youngadam-4

    soap opera drama

    This director really is like a low rent ken Loach/mike Leigh. Unfortunately, FRAN, has none of the cinematic prowess or complex politics that make the English masters rise above the kitchen sink.

    The film is nothing more than TELEVISION drama. Turgid script, stolid story arc, overwrought drama. The characters speak their truth in a way that is unrealistic and terribly daytime television.

    The writer aims so hard to invest complex stakes in the story that the characters are forced (like puppets) to react dramatically to the events. Because of this reliance on the motivating stakes of the story, the characters have no internal world. And certainly the cinematic world created is nothing short of ordinary.

    Unfortunate that the creators of this stinker are now at the helm of deciding the future of Australian cinema. Perhaps therein lies the problem with the sort of scripts and directors being encouraged by Australian funding bodies.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This was the only film directed by Glenda Hambly.
    • Connections
      Features Cop Shop (1977)
    • Soundtracks
      Piano Concerto, Opus 111 No. 32
      Written by Ludwig van Beethoven

      Performed by Roger Smalley

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 21, 1985 (Australia)
    • Country of origin
      • Australia
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Wenn die Liebe verbrennt
    • Filming locations
      • Perth, Western Australia, Australia
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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