Felicia's Journey (film)


Felicia's Journey is a 1999 British-Canadian psychological thriller film written and directed by Atom Egoyan and starring Elaine Cassidy and Bob Hoskins. It is based on the prize-winning 1994 novel of the same name by William Trevor. It was entered into the 1999 Cannes Film Festival and won four Genie Awards, including Best Adapted Screenplay.

Plot

Felicia, a teenager in Northern Ireland, travels to Birmingham, England, hoping to find Johnny, the boyfriend who made her pregnant but who then left to join the British Army without leaving an address.
After taking a ferry to England and beginning a hopeless search to find the lawnmower factory in Birmingham where she believes Johnny now works, Felicia encounters an older man, Joseph Hilditch, a catering manager at a factory, who is also the son of Gala, an eccentric TV chef who enjoyed fame in past decades. Hilditch regularly watches the old programmes of his presumably-deceased mother while he cooks her recipes and collects material about her. Hilditch offers to help Felicia; however, his motives for doing so are initially unclear, and it is subsequently suggested through flashback sequences that he has in the past befriended but then turned on vulnerable young women.
Hilditch refers Felicia to a bed and breakfast and offers to drive her in his Morris Minor, to a factory that he suggests could be the one she is looking for, which is on the way to the hospital where the unmarried Hilditch claims he is going to visit his wife. Felicia fails to find Johnny at the factory; but, while she is out of the car, Hilditch goes through her bags and steals her money. Subsequently, Felicia comes across a Jamaican Christian witness who offers Felicia a free overnight stay at a church hostel. While staying at the hostel, Felicia discovers that her money has gone and, after appearing to accuse others at the home of stealing the money, flees the hostel for Hilditch's house.
Hilditch has meanwhile discovered Johnny's whereabouts, in the barracks where he is still serving with the British Army, but does not disclose this to Felicia. He does however tell her that his wife has died and that she suggested that Felicia abort her unborn child. After the abortion, which Hilditch pays for, he takes her back to his house and gives her an overdose of sleeping pills. As she is passing out he explains that he has 'helped' many other vulnerable girls but 'lays them to rest' when they decide it is time to leave him. While digging out in his garden, the Jamaican Christian parishioner and a new convert enter his yard and begin to preach about Jesus. The Christian reveals that Felicia had told her about Hilditch, saying he was a kind but troubled man. Hilditch feels flashes of guilt and confesses that he did, in fact, steal from and cheat Felicia so that she would return to him. He explains that he feels lonely, and the horrified Christians get up and leave. Upstairs in the house, Felicia awakens from her sleep and struggles down the stairs. Hilditch finds her trying to escape the house but allows her to leave. He later walks to his kitchen, where he hangs himself with a pair of tights.

Cast

Reception

Felicia's Journey received positive reviews from critics, as the film holds an 88% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 41 reviews. The Guardian critic noted it was the first "big screen" film set in Birmingham that he had ever ever seen.

Accolades

The film competed for the Palme d'Or at the 1999 Cannes Film Festival. It was nominated for 10 Genie Awards following the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television's decision to revise rules allowing films with only a minority of Canadian involvement in production to compete, with also allowed Sunshine to be nominated for 14.
AwardDate of ceremonyCategoryRecipientResult
Genie Awards2000Best Motion PictureBruce Davey
Genie Awards2000Best DirectionAtom Egoyan
Genie Awards2000Best ActorBob Hoskins
Genie Awards2000Best ActressElaine Cassidy
Genie Awards2000Best Adapted ScreenplayAtom Egoyan
Genie Awards2000Best CinematographyPaul Sarossy
Genie Awards2000Best Costume DesignSandy Powell
Genie Awards2000Best ScoreMychael Danna
Genie Awards2000Best SoundDaniel Pellerin, Keith Elliott, Peter Kelly and Brian Simmons
Genie Awards2000Best Sound EditingSteve Munro, Sue Conley, Andy Malcolm, Tim Roberts and David Drainie Taylor
Satellite AwardsJanuary 16, 2000Best Actress – Motion Picture, DramaElaine Cassidy
Toronto Film Critics AssociationDecember 16, 1999Best Canadian Film