Mr. Rice's Secret

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Mr. Rice's Secret
Directed byNicholas Kendall
Written byJ. H. Wyman
Produced byColleen Hardwick Nystedt
StarringDavid Bowie
Bill Switzer
Teryl Rothery
Garwin Sanford
Zach Lipovsky
Jason Anderson
Richard de Klerk
Edited byRon E. Yoshida
Music bySimon Kendall
Al Rodger
Production
company
Panorama
Distributed byPanorama
Release date
  • 1999 (1999)
Running time
113 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
Budget$3.2 million[1]

Mr. Rice's Secret is a 1999 Canadian family drama film directed by Nicholas Kendall, an instructor at Capilano University in Vancouver.[2][3] It was written by J. H. Wyman[4] and stars David Bowie as the title character, a mysterious man who leaves after death a series of clues to a 12-year-old boy with cancer, to help him appreciate life. The production was filmed in 1998 and released in 2000.

Owen Walters is 12 and suffers from Hodgkin's disease. He has a group of friends who award points to each other for doing risky or strange acts.[5] Owen's parents want him to befriend Simon, who has leukemia, but he rejects him as he considers Simon to be more ill than he, reminding him of his own mortality.[6] He also rejects his best friend Funnel Head to win the approval of bullies.[7]

Owen's mysterious neighbour Mr. Rice dies, and Owen secretly videotapes the funeral to show to his friends. They go to Rice's house to watch it on his video player, and scour through his belongings, finding a letter for Owen. He decodes it with a ring he received from Rice, and finds that it is a series of clues leading to a secret. The boys go looking for the clues, one of which involves exhuming Rice.[6]

Rice appears in flashbacks over the film, including one where he tells Owen "All people, no matter who they are, they all wish they'd appreciated life more. It's what you do in life that's important, not how much time you have”.[2] Owen finds the potion of life[8] which allowed Rice to live for 400 years.[2] However, he makes a recovery from his treatment, and instead gives the potion to Simon to save his life.

Cast

Production

Most of it was filmed in New Westminster, in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia.[2]

Peter O'Toole was originally considered for the role of Rice, but negotiations fell through and the role went to Bowie, who enjoyed reading the script. Recording had begun before Bowie was cast, and the crew were amazed that he would be in the film. The filming location was kept secret so that Bowie would not be disturbed. Kendall recalled Bowie as a quiet and introverted man, who had remarked that he wanted a clone so that he could act alongside his musical and artistic interests.[2]

Producer Colleen Hardwick, who had idolised Bowie as a schoolgirl, said she "about died" to hear him make the phonecall to accept the role. She too recalled how he mixed with all members of the cast and crew. Hardwick likened Rice's advice to Owen with how Bowie accepted his own imminent death from cancer in January 2016.[1]

The film was originally known as Exhuming Mr. Rice.[8] It was released on DVD in Region 1 in September 2001[9] and Region 2 that November.[8]

Reception

References

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