Ethel & Ernest (film)

Ethel & Ernest
Poster
Directed by Roger Mainwood
Screenplay by Roger Mainwood
Based on Ethel & Ernest
by Raymond Briggs
Produced by
  • Camilla Deakin
  • Ruth Fielding
  • Stephan Roelants
Starring
Edited by Richard Overall
Music by Carl Davis
Production
companies
  • Lupus Films
  • Ethel & Ernest Productions
  • Melusine Productions
  • Cloth Cat Animation
  • BFI
  • Ffilm Cymru Wales
  • Film Fund Luxembourg
Distributed by BBC
Universal Pictures
Vertigo Releasing
Release dates
  • 15 October 2016 (London Film Festival)
  • 28 December 2016
Running time
94 minutes
Countries United Kingdom
Luxembourg
Language English

Ethel & Ernest is a 2016 British animated biographical film directed by Roger Mainwood. The film is based on the 1998 graphic memoir of the same name written by Raymond Briggs, and follows Briggs' parents, Ethel and Ernest, through their period of marriage from the 1920s to their deaths in the 1970s. It was broadcast on television on BBC One on 28 December 2016.

Plot

The film details the marriage of Ethel and Ernest Briggs from the 1920s to the 1970s, as they live through extraordinary events occurring in that period.

Cast

Production

The film was originally to be produced by John Coates, notable for producing The Snowman. When Coates died in 2012, Camilla Deakin and Ruth Fielding (Lupus Films) were then hired to help complete the film. The voice cast for the film was revealed on 3 August 2015. The film was made of 67,680 hand-drawn individual frames.

Release

The film made its official debut in the 60th BFI London Film Festival. The film made its theatrical premiere in the U.S. at the Nuart Landmark Theatre in Santa Monica, California, on 15 December 2017.

Reception

Critical response

On review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an average rating of 97%, which an average of 7.5/10, based on 35 reviews. The site's critical consensus reads, "Gentle, poignant, and vividly animated, Ethel & Ernest is a warm character study with an evocative sense of time and place." On Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating, the film has a score of 72 out of 100, based on 10 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews."