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6.0/10
418
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In 1941, the IRA plans a campaign to coincide with the planned German invasion of England. Dermot O'Neill finds it easy to get into the IRA, but can he get out?In 1941, the IRA plans a campaign to coincide with the planned German invasion of England. Dermot O'Neill finds it easy to get into the IRA, but can he get out?In 1941, the IRA plans a campaign to coincide with the planned German invasion of England. Dermot O'Neill finds it easy to get into the IRA, but can he get out?
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Niall MacGinnis
- Ned O'Neill (Dermot's brother)
- (as Niall McGinnis)
Eddie Golden
- Johnny Corrigan
- (as Edward Golden)
J.G. Devlin
- Const. Lauden
- (as James Devlin)
T.P. McKenna
- A McIntyre Boy
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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I had hoped from the opening sequence that it would feature the IRA in collaboration with the Nazis.However it developed in a different direction.Iit is just rather dull with little pace.
Robert Mitchum is an irish-man who joins the IRA during the WW2 era. They plan to fight the British while they're occupied with the Germans. Could have been a much better movie if the people didn't act so one- dimensional. I almost yawned a few times.
Where I saw it: Showtime Extreme (ironic, i know)
My grade: C-
Where I saw it: Showtime Extreme (ironic, i know)
My grade: C-
During WWII in a small Irish town, Dermot O'Neill (Robert Mitchum) is recruited into the IRA along with other locals including Sean Reilly (Richard Harris). He starts by stealing guns from a British armoury, but the next mission however to destroy a power station results in several deaths and Reilly is injured and the two have to go on the run. O'Neill remains patriotic but questions the value of what they are doing and particularly the principles that drive them when Reilly is captured and high and mighty and cowardly leader Don McGinnis (Dan O'Herlihy - v. Good) won't risk the group to rescue Reilly. In addition, when McGinnis threatens to attack the 'traitorous' Irish police, O'Neill says he'll report them and of course they turn against him.
The film partly considers the rights and wrongs of the campaign and its collaboration with the Nazis, but mostly it considers the difficulties faced balancing loyalties to Ireland vs loyalty to family and friends. Mitchum is terrific here and works particularly well with Harris - one can only speculate as to how much Irish Whiskey got drunk on this set. There is also tremendous support from stalwarts like Cyril Cusack and Niall MacGinnis. It all adds up to an enjoyable, witty and occasionally moving tale, just very occasionally straying into 'top of the morning to you' cliche.
The film partly considers the rights and wrongs of the campaign and its collaboration with the Nazis, but mostly it considers the difficulties faced balancing loyalties to Ireland vs loyalty to family and friends. Mitchum is terrific here and works particularly well with Harris - one can only speculate as to how much Irish Whiskey got drunk on this set. There is also tremendous support from stalwarts like Cyril Cusack and Niall MacGinnis. It all adds up to an enjoyable, witty and occasionally moving tale, just very occasionally straying into 'top of the morning to you' cliche.
The IRA in Northern Ireland during the last world war was in a strange boat.
Since, as is said in the Near East, "the enemy of my enemy is my friend," there was naturally a certain positive attitude towards Nazi Germany. (You can find this social dynamic explicated by Fritz Heider, the German psychologist, if you like.) Well, the Nazis are mentioned here, and there is a broadcast by Lord Haw Haw, but other than that this is a story of the IRA against the British establishment in Northern Ireland.
What a tangled web they wove. And what a cast to be caught up in it. Robert Mitchum sounds passably Irish, and looks it too. His hair is long and curly and it gives him a poetic look. (How many times did he play an Irishman? I'm beginning to lose count.) Anne Heywood looks just fine but occasionally sounds as if she's reading from cue cards. The rest of the cast give first-rate performances: Richard Harris, Dan O'Herlihy, and Cyril Cusack especially. O'Herlihy is, I think, an underrated actor. Here he does his "Odd Man Out" number, only he's a good deal more ambitious here than there. He had considerable range: distant and deceitful in "Home Before Dark," compassionate and humanistic in "Fail-Safe." Likewise Cyril Cusack, who has a pretty interesting last name. It's a common enough name in Ireland, but it was English before that, and before that it was brought from France by the Normans, to whom it was a location name (one who lived in Cotius's place). It's also a Ukranian name meaning "cossack." Cyril Cusack is an exceptional performer. He was one of many excellent things about, "The Day of the Jackal," in which he gave his finest performance, brief though it was.
Alas -- fascinating political situation, wonderful cast -- great potential wasted on a narrative that should have been polished. It isn't that they don't have the ethnographic details right, because they do. Mitchum is the "O'Neill boy," although he's 35. He'll remain a "boy" until he's married, an event which takes place late it life in traditional Irish villages. (That's their form of birth control.) The Irish also practiced primogeniture, meaning that the oldest son gets the farm, skimpy as it is in this case, so poor Mitchum will have to get out on his own. And the script captures some of the ways the Irish tend to play with words. When Mitchum informs on the IRA inside the police station, the Sargent tells him that his friends are waiting outside to kill him, and Mitchum replies, "I think I'll go home by the back way, pendin' the coolin' of their ardor." (There's a hilarious scene in "Angela's Ashes" in which a teacher pities a young boy because "you're so poor you haven't a shoe to your foot.")
But, the narrative is not taut. The characters and their motives are not clearly drawn, except in the way that cartoons are drawn. Not because of a deliberate attempt at ambiguity but through carelessness. Mitchum is entirely too casual when he joins the IRA, as if accepting a drink from a friend at the bar. And he informs on them with equal aplomb. O'Herlihy's character is one-dimensional, a glory-hungry IRA commandant who is also the jealous, rejected lover of Mitchum's girl. If the script is weak, so is Tay Garnett's direction. Toward the end, O'Herlihy mistakenly shoots a young boy. No one bothered to include a shot of the boy falling from his bicycle.
Then O'Herlihy turns and runs away into the rain, and we never find out what happens afterward, leaving not just a loose thread hanging but a veritable hawser. Next, we get a quick change of scene to Mitchum and his girl sailing away on a ferry into the sunset.
Ho hum. What a waste.
Since, as is said in the Near East, "the enemy of my enemy is my friend," there was naturally a certain positive attitude towards Nazi Germany. (You can find this social dynamic explicated by Fritz Heider, the German psychologist, if you like.) Well, the Nazis are mentioned here, and there is a broadcast by Lord Haw Haw, but other than that this is a story of the IRA against the British establishment in Northern Ireland.
What a tangled web they wove. And what a cast to be caught up in it. Robert Mitchum sounds passably Irish, and looks it too. His hair is long and curly and it gives him a poetic look. (How many times did he play an Irishman? I'm beginning to lose count.) Anne Heywood looks just fine but occasionally sounds as if she's reading from cue cards. The rest of the cast give first-rate performances: Richard Harris, Dan O'Herlihy, and Cyril Cusack especially. O'Herlihy is, I think, an underrated actor. Here he does his "Odd Man Out" number, only he's a good deal more ambitious here than there. He had considerable range: distant and deceitful in "Home Before Dark," compassionate and humanistic in "Fail-Safe." Likewise Cyril Cusack, who has a pretty interesting last name. It's a common enough name in Ireland, but it was English before that, and before that it was brought from France by the Normans, to whom it was a location name (one who lived in Cotius's place). It's also a Ukranian name meaning "cossack." Cyril Cusack is an exceptional performer. He was one of many excellent things about, "The Day of the Jackal," in which he gave his finest performance, brief though it was.
Alas -- fascinating political situation, wonderful cast -- great potential wasted on a narrative that should have been polished. It isn't that they don't have the ethnographic details right, because they do. Mitchum is the "O'Neill boy," although he's 35. He'll remain a "boy" until he's married, an event which takes place late it life in traditional Irish villages. (That's their form of birth control.) The Irish also practiced primogeniture, meaning that the oldest son gets the farm, skimpy as it is in this case, so poor Mitchum will have to get out on his own. And the script captures some of the ways the Irish tend to play with words. When Mitchum informs on the IRA inside the police station, the Sargent tells him that his friends are waiting outside to kill him, and Mitchum replies, "I think I'll go home by the back way, pendin' the coolin' of their ardor." (There's a hilarious scene in "Angela's Ashes" in which a teacher pities a young boy because "you're so poor you haven't a shoe to your foot.")
But, the narrative is not taut. The characters and their motives are not clearly drawn, except in the way that cartoons are drawn. Not because of a deliberate attempt at ambiguity but through carelessness. Mitchum is entirely too casual when he joins the IRA, as if accepting a drink from a friend at the bar. And he informs on them with equal aplomb. O'Herlihy's character is one-dimensional, a glory-hungry IRA commandant who is also the jealous, rejected lover of Mitchum's girl. If the script is weak, so is Tay Garnett's direction. Toward the end, O'Herlihy mistakenly shoots a young boy. No one bothered to include a shot of the boy falling from his bicycle.
Then O'Herlihy turns and runs away into the rain, and we never find out what happens afterward, leaving not just a loose thread hanging but a veritable hawser. Next, we get a quick change of scene to Mitchum and his girl sailing away on a ferry into the sunset.
Ho hum. What a waste.
You know what that means, two characters such as those one on a shooting, as Robert Mitchum with Stanley Baker during Bob Aldrich's THE ANGRY HILLS; I mean booze is never far from the "companionship" that may rise between the likes of Mitchum, Harris and Baker, so notorious heavy drinkers. And they were not the only ones.....So this Tay Garnet's film, as several from this same director, offer some John Ford's accents, elements: Irish, men's atmosphere, saloon fist fights. And there were not so many movies speaking if iRA in those days, the sixties decade. Good film but not my favourite from POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE director.
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- TriviaThis was T.P. McKenna's first film.
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- The Night Fighters
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- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
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