Nobody Has to Know

Nobody Has to Know

202299 min
6.7/10
DramaRomance

Plot Summary

After a stroke and no memories from his past, Phil encounters Millie who inhabits a desert part of Isle of Lewis. She will shortly entrust him with his deepest secret : they were in love.

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Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (11)

Michelle Fairley

Michelle Fairley

Millie

Bouli Lanners

Bouli Lanners

Phil

Cal MacAninch

Cal MacAninch

Peter

Clovis Cornillac

Clovis Cornillac

Benoit

Julian Glover

Julian Glover

Angus

Andrew Still

Andrew Still

Brian

No Image

Ainsley Jordan

Beverly

No Image

Paul Arned

Character

Anne Kidd

Anne Kidd

Character

Donald Douglas

Donald Douglas

Character

Therese Bradley

Therese Bradley

Character

🎬Crew

Director

Bouli Lanners

Writers

Bouli Lanners

Producers

Jacques-Henri Bronckart

🖼️Gallery (4 images)

Nobody Has to Know backdrop 1
Nobody Has to Know backdrop 2
Nobody Has to Know backdrop 3
Nobody Has to Know backdrop 4

💬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

11/8/2023

Near the start of this film, we hear a weather forecast on the car radio advising sunny spells are imminent. Well they didn't come, nor are there really any other sunny moments in this story. Set on the rather dark, bleak and wintry Isle of Lewis, we meet "Phil" (auteur Bouli Landers) who works as a general factotum with "Brian" (Andrew Still) who is the grandson of the smallholding owner "Angus" (Julian Glover). The two workers bond well enough during their largely outdoor, and muddy, endeavours and also over a pint afterwards where the former man discovers that the young man's aunt "Millie" (Michelle Fairley) is looked upon rather disdainfully by others in their small community. It's only when "Phil" suffers a stroke on the beach, that this lady comes forward to help his recuperation, and in the process tells quite a big "white" lie that sets the scene for the rest of this drama. It's a very slow burn with, frankly, a very thin plot but the acting is quite genuine and the island environment and tightly knit family scenario does add a bit of richness to the increasingly predicable outcome. I've seen Fairley on stage a few times and she is a good actress at delivering the less is more style, but here there are just too many lingering shots, driving to and fro, having a cigarette meaningfully - without really developing the characters enough, nor really explaining while the originally Belgian visitor is there in the first place. It's nicely shot, but just rather unremarkable.

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Production Companies

Barry Crerar
Versus Production