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The Boys
(and Girl) from County Clare
DIR: John Irvin WRI: Nicholas
Adams PROD: Wolfgang Esenwein, Evzen Kolar, Ellen Dinerman
Little DOP: Thomas Burstyn ED: Ian Crafford
DES: Tom McCullagh CAST: Colm Meaney, Bernard Hill, Andrea
Corr, Patrick Bergin, Shaun Evans, Philip Barantini, Charlotte
Bradley, Catherine Byrne
Two brothers compete for the All-Ireland Ceili
championship in 1960s Ireland. Colm Meaney plays Jimmy, who
went to England twenty-odd years ago and made good
ten men working under him and twenty new suits a year. He's
put a Liverpool ceili band together who have defied beatlemania,
and stuck the old ways. His brother John Joe, Bernard Hill,
stays behind to thatch the cottage, look after the sheep,
and describe himself as 'a walking map of Ireland'. Then there's
the third brother, Padjo, waiting in the wings. He's been
off in the missions in Africa: converting the heathens to
ceili music. And don't forget about 'the girl': the film had
already screened at the Boston Film Festival under the title
The Boys from County Clare before they copped onto
the popular appeal of Andrea Corr as the cailin deas
who's fiddle playing is 'closer to the heavens'.
The ceili championship becomes the backdrop
to a series of relationships to be pursued and resolved. Will
the brothers Jimmy and John Joe make peace? Will Anne, Andrea
Corr, hook up with Teddy, Shaun Evans, from the rival band?
Will Jimmy resolve his relationship with his love child, Anne,
or with her mother played by Charlotte Bradley? Will Anne
leave or stay? Will Teddy leave or stay? And who will win
the ceili competition? There's a bag full of resolutions and
still room for a sequel.
There are amusing moments in the film.
It is engaging up to a point. Hill and Meaney are always watchable,
and give strong performances. The direction, by John Irvin,
is solid and keeps the film lively enough. And then for the
tourists there's lots of lovely scenery from the Isle of Ma
.
I mean Ireland. But for a modern audience it's hard to get
beyond the deluge of clichés; drunks throwing up their
false teeth, and auties who always have the kettle on. There's
even some American hippies who turn up for the festival just
to cast the cliché net a little further.
I know there's a certain amount of truth
in every cliché. I'm sure many people will see this
as a realistic portrayal. But the point is we've seen it all
before and it's gotten stale. It just gives an extra layer
of predictability to a story that isn't very original in the
first place.
Stephen Kane
Rated
15A (see IFCO
website for details)
The Boys (and Girl) from County Clare is released on 24th
March 2006.
The
Boys (and Girl) from County Clare Official website
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