Showing posts with label aiden gillen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aiden gillen. Show all posts

Friday, April 18, 2014

Brendan Gleeson: Film review: Calvary – essential viewing

IRISH POST
By Stephen Martin on April 17, 2014


Calvary
Director: John Michael McDonagh
Starring: Brendan Gleeson, Chris O’Dowd, Aidan Gillen, Dylan Moran, Kelly Reilly and Pat Shortt
★★★★ (out of five)

“I FIRST tasted semen when I was seven years old,” are the first words of dialogue in John Michael McDonagh’s Calvary, as uttered by a disembodied voice to a discombobulated priest in a darkened church confessional.

“Certainly a startling opening line,” the priest responds, voicing the thoughts of the audience. “Is that supposed to be irony?” the disgruntled confessor asks. “I’m sorry,” the priest says, “let’s start again.”

This introductory exchange sets up the narrative style of McDonagh’s movie, fusing serious commentary with bone-dry satire.



McDonagh –a second-generation Irishman raised in central London – draws characters that spend most of the time conventionally acting out the absorbing drama, yet periodically collapse the artifice with deflating self-references.

They offer oblique winks to camera, breaking the fourth wall and waving across to the viewer. It’s a Brechtian, Beckettian, Bunuelian cocktail of forlorn hope, mordant humour and a cold moral vacuum. Yet all-the-while, it urges us not to have sleepless nights.

It’s also excellent, a cleverly-devised story (if a little thin on plot) featuring fine performances from top Irish talent. The superb Brendan Gleeson leads the cast as the embattled Fr James, vicar to an isolated coastal community, who is informed by one of his flock that he will kill him, “a week on Sunday,” in an abused victim’s revenge upon a depraved Catholic Church.

The man who makes this threat is known to Father James, though he remains a mystery to the audience until the climax.

“I’ll give you enough time to put your house in order,” he generously promises. The rest of the movie invites viewers to guess the identity of the killer among the townsfolk they meet, as the good father tends to his “pastoral duties”.





Saturday, April 5, 2014

Michael Fassbender, Colin Farrell, Domhnall Gleeson, Allen Leech: Hollywood’s hottest A-listers are in Dublin for the IFTAs. Who gets your vote?

EVOKE.IE
April 4, 2014

Michael Fassbender, Allen Leech, and Colin Farrell are also in town.

The IFTAs are taking place tomorrow night in Dublin’s Doubletree Hilton Hotel, which will be brimming with hot Hollywood hunks! 

Domhnall Gleeson, Killian Scott, and Kevin Spacey

Ireland’s own Michael Fassbender, Jamie Dornan, Jack Reynor, Domhnall Gleeson and Colin Farrell will be throwing on their tuxedos for the prestigious event, while American actor Kevin Spacey is flying in especially.


Presented by MTV star Laura Whitmore, and Bachelor’s Walk actor Simon Delaney, the event will also be attended by Irish veteran actors Brendan Gleeson, Colm Meaney and Jeremy Irons, while Oscar nominated actress Saoirse Ronan will be getting out her best frock for the event.




READ MORE HERE: http://www.evoke.ie/the-hot-list-hollywoods-hottest-a-listers-arrive-in-dublin-for-tomorrow-nights-iftas-who-gets-your-vote/


Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Why Detective David Tennant is a prime-time suspect British murder dramas Mayday and Broadchurch have helped bring event television back from the grave, by Libby Brooks The Guardian,


Life's a beach for police officers David Tennant and Olivia Colman in Broadchurch. Photograph: Patrick Redmond

Who wants to think about murdered children on a weekday evening? A fair few of us, if the ratings are anything to go by. This week BBC1 and ITV have gone head to head with new crime dramas Mayday and Broadchurch: both with decorated casts and nuanced scripts that lift them above the standard police procedural; both previewed as the kind of event television that can seem antediluvian in an age of download and bargain box sets.

Mayday, which tracks the disappearance of 14-year-old Hattie as she is about to take the part of May Queen in her village's annual parade, stars Sophie Okonedo, Aidan Gillen and a fabulously overwrought Lesley Manville. It launched on Sunday – the first of five consecutive nights – with 6.2 million viewers and a 25% audience share; but lost out the following evening to the first of eight weekly installments of Broadchurch, which began with 6.8 million and a concurrent gush-in on social media. Coincidentally, both series are made by Kudos, the production company behind Spooks and, most recently, the bizarrely brilliant Utopia.

It has already been suggested that Broadchurch detectives David Tennant and Olivia Colman, investigating the death of a local boy in the eponymous seaside town, owe a debt to the Nordic noir plotlines that have dominated quality crime drama of late – although the scenery of Dorset's Jurassic coast, where the series was filmed, could give any fjord a run for its money, and, as Tennant proved on Monday night, it is difficult to be entirely sombre when you're eating a 99 ice cream.

READ MORE: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/mar/05/tennant-prime-time-suspect-mayday-broadchurch

Thursday, June 21, 2012

EIFF 2012: Shadow Dancer James Marsh’s IRA thriller is an accomplished, slow-burning drama Source: The List (Issue 698) Date: 21 June 2012 Written by: Tom Dawson (LIST FILMS)



Like the late Alan Clarke’s remarkable television film Elephant, which depicted a series of senseless killings in Northern Ireland during the era of the so-called Troubles, director James Marsh’s Belfast-set drama shows sectarian murders being perpetrated in domestic suburban locations.

Andrea Riseborough excels in the lead role of Colette, a member of an IRA active service unit in 1993, who is arrested mid-mission by the British authorities in London. She is given a stark choice by Clive Owen’s MI5 officer Mac: either she returns to her mother (Brid Brennan) in West Belfast and secretly informs on the movements of her own IRA-combatant brothers (Aidan Gillen and Domhnall Gleeson), or she will be sent to an English jail, and thus separated from her young son.




READ MORE: http://film.list.co.uk/article/42956-eiff-2012-shadow-dancer/


Monday, January 23, 2012

Clive Owen: New Poster and Pics of Clive Owen and Andrea Riseborough in Shadow Dancer (I need my fix)


New Poster and Pics of Clive Owen and Andrea Riseborough in Shadow Dancer


When a widowed mother (and active member of the IRA) is arrested in an aborted bomb plot, she falls into the hands of a British intelligence officer (Owen). After the MI5 agent offers her an ultimatum, she must make hard choices to protect her son in this heart-wrenching thriller.

The hotly anticipated film will screen at Sundance on Tuesday. (Of the reviewers currently in Park City, this film consistently comes up on their “must see” lists.)  It will also screen out of competition at the Berlinale next month. It stars along with Owen and Riseborough, Aidan Gillen (The Wire, Game of Thrones), Domhnall Gleeson (Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows part 1 and part 2 and son of Brendan) and Gillian Anderson.

to read more:  http://www.ineedmyfix.com/2012/01/22/139760/