He offers her a loch-side pebble, a sort of sentimental talisman with which she is to carry up the mountain. Similarities to Frodo's journey abound as she attempts her ascent (minus the special effects, of course).
But rather than casting her pebble into the fiery furnace of Mount Doom, Edie must set it atop Mount Suilven and bask in her own sense of achievement ... if she makes it.
The scenery is jaw dropping, almost to the detriment of the film; the result eliciting a slightly dreamy quality. One does wonder if the Scottish Tourism Board slipped cinematographer August Jakobsson a fiver to show off their beautiful countryside.
Sheila Hancock does a commendable job of playing an ageing woman whose steely resolve shuns the predetermined life laid out before her. However, the chemistry between her and nice-guy-guide Jonny is unconvincingly patchy and their relationship oscillates between feeling authentically believable to cloyingly forced with exaggerated moments of lighthearted whimsy.
But despite its pitfalls, Edie still provides a satisfying sense of catharsis and is at times quite sublime, and although the sweeping landscapes are quite fawning, it still makes you want to sign up for a trip to Scotland.
Edie
Director: Simon Hunter
Cast: Sheila Hancock, Kevin Guthrie, Paul Brannigan
Running time: 102 minutes
Censor rating: M, offensive language