Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaSpike Milligan's book about the divided Irish village of Puckoon comes to the big screen.Spike Milligan's book about the divided Irish village of Puckoon comes to the big screen.Spike Milligan's book about the divided Irish village of Puckoon comes to the big screen.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Recensioni in evidenza
I hope, from his seat on Heaven's comedic throne, Spike Milligan can see and can enjoy this film, as Terence Ryan and Ken Tuohy have taken a book that the author himself said writing it "nearly turned me mad" into a joy to watch.
The film tells the story of the Irish town of Puckoon and the problems befallen upon it when the partition between Northern Ireland and the Republic is drawn up, cutting its way through the centre of the village and, more worringly, through the middle of the churchyard. This causes some deceased, buried in the Catholic churchyard, to now be in the Protestant north - and so the local priest, assisted by a wide variety of eccentric locals, aims to move the bodies back undercover of darkness, and so avoiding the bureaucratic British border guards.
It was inspired work to cast the Irish comedian and poet Sean Hughes to play the part of Madigan. He brings an innocence to the part, especially in his to-camera pieces (which is normally where he interacts with the voiceover of Richard Attenborough, playing supposedly the writer/director of the film). Daragh O'Malley playing Father Rudden is also worthy of considerable praise; and the rest of the cast, from the household names like Elliott Gould and Griff Rhys Jones to people with what would normally be called 'bit parts' - such as Spike's daughter Jane who plays Madigan's wife give 100% The credit for this goes, in no small part, to the wonderful characterisations given by Spike in the original book.
I could argue that the film is slightly too long, or that Elliott Gould's Irish accent left a little to be desired, but those would be only minor points and take nothing away from the excellence of this film.
The film tells the story of the Irish town of Puckoon and the problems befallen upon it when the partition between Northern Ireland and the Republic is drawn up, cutting its way through the centre of the village and, more worringly, through the middle of the churchyard. This causes some deceased, buried in the Catholic churchyard, to now be in the Protestant north - and so the local priest, assisted by a wide variety of eccentric locals, aims to move the bodies back undercover of darkness, and so avoiding the bureaucratic British border guards.
It was inspired work to cast the Irish comedian and poet Sean Hughes to play the part of Madigan. He brings an innocence to the part, especially in his to-camera pieces (which is normally where he interacts with the voiceover of Richard Attenborough, playing supposedly the writer/director of the film). Daragh O'Malley playing Father Rudden is also worthy of considerable praise; and the rest of the cast, from the household names like Elliott Gould and Griff Rhys Jones to people with what would normally be called 'bit parts' - such as Spike's daughter Jane who plays Madigan's wife give 100% The credit for this goes, in no small part, to the wonderful characterisations given by Spike in the original book.
I could argue that the film is slightly too long, or that Elliott Gould's Irish accent left a little to be desired, but those would be only minor points and take nothing away from the excellence of this film.
I saw this at a Boston Irish Film Festival screening a few years ago and thought it was just simply amazing!! Does ANYONE know where to get it in the U.S.? It rivals such other Irish flicks as Waking Ned Devine and the Rat in it's hilarity, but alas it is unavailable here as far as I know. All about a little town in the hills that gets divided up during the separation of the counties of Ulster from the rest of the country. The most memorable scene to me was when people were trying to cross the border to get to their everyday lives. Women unable to feed their chickens/harvest the eggs, men being able to go into the bar but not actually sit at it. The church even gets separated from sections of the graveyard, which in turn creates some more very funny situations where some of the villagers and the priest (Daragh O'Malley) try and sneak into Ulster to bury a body of one of their late friends. Absolutely BRILLIANT!!!
10monty-46
This is a fantastic comedy and a 'must see' for fans of Milligan humour and Pythonesque comedy. The screenplay has adapted the story as close to Milligan's novel as can be, keeping all the characters and humour as Spike portrayed them. This is the comedy film of the century.
Directed and narrated by Richard Attenborough, Puckoon is an adaption of Spike
Milligan's humorous book about an Irish village where the border between the
six Ulster counties and what was then called the Irish Free State. I doubt that
anyone on this side of the pond would know anyone in the cast other than Elliott
Gould who plays the village Jewish doctor like he might have been understudying
Paul Muni from The Last Angry Man. Gould's kind of artificially grafted into the
proceedings and he really doesn't serve any purpose.
The main character is played by Sean Hughes and he's the village lout who avoids work like it was a bill collector. Somehow some way Hughes gums up everything he gets involved in, including the boundary commission where the line in Puckoon takes all kinds of crazy twists and turns.
You probably have to be a bit up on Irish history to appreciate most of this picture. Still there is enough physical comedy in it and that language is universal.
Puckoon is amusing enough and recommended, but for a select audience.
The main character is played by Sean Hughes and he's the village lout who avoids work like it was a bill collector. Somehow some way Hughes gums up everything he gets involved in, including the boundary commission where the line in Puckoon takes all kinds of crazy twists and turns.
You probably have to be a bit up on Irish history to appreciate most of this picture. Still there is enough physical comedy in it and that language is universal.
Puckoon is amusing enough and recommended, but for a select audience.
Puckoon, the story of a small Irish town divided by the Partition of Ireland in 1924 - really divided, the border goes through the middle of it! The characters are wonderful - the village idiot, the poacher, the priest and the hero(?)Dan Madigan, who participates reluctantly in hare-brained schemes to smuggle explosives into the North and deceased Catholics from the now Protestant side of the churchyard back into the Catholic part. Spike Milligan really hit the nail on the head with this hilarious story - pointing up the ridiculousness of political partition by 1)making it so farcical and 2) making the authorities who try to enforce it look like idiots. I notice that the Norwegian reviewer thought it a waste of money - but perhaps this film has the sort of message that only the Brits and Irish would understand. 10/10
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe film takes place in Puckoon, County Sligo, Ireland in 1924.
- Citazioni
Writer-Director: Many people die of thirst, but the Irish were born with one.
- Curiosità sui creditiThe above Cast list was random... like most Borders!
- Colonne sonoreDanny Boy
Traditional
I più visti
Accedi per valutare e creare un elenco di titoli salvati per ottenere consigli personalizzati
- How long is Puckoon?Powered by Alexa
Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- 愛爾蘭的沙頭角
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Castle Leslie, Glaslough, County Monaghan, Irlanda(on location)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 22 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1
Contribuisci a questa pagina
Suggerisci una modifica o aggiungi i contenuti mancanti