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Butcher Boy

Original title: The Butcher Boy
  • 1997
  • Tous publics avec avertissement
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Butcher Boy (1997)
Dark ComedySatireComedyDrama

The antisocial son of an alcoholic father and a bipolar mother grows up in 1960s Ireland.The antisocial son of an alcoholic father and a bipolar mother grows up in 1960s Ireland.The antisocial son of an alcoholic father and a bipolar mother grows up in 1960s Ireland.

  • Director
    • Neil Jordan
  • Writers
    • Pat McCabe
    • Neil Jordan
  • Stars
    • Stephen Rea
    • Fiona Shaw
    • Eamonn Owens
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Neil Jordan
    • Writers
      • Pat McCabe
      • Neil Jordan
    • Stars
      • Stephen Rea
      • Fiona Shaw
      • Eamonn Owens
    • 76User reviews
    • 43Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Butcher Boy
    Trailer 0:21
    The Butcher Boy

    Photos27

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    Top cast51

    Edit
    Stephen Rea
    Stephen Rea
    • Da Brady
    Fiona Shaw
    Fiona Shaw
    • Mrs. Nugent
    Eamonn Owens
    Eamonn Owens
    • Francie Brady
    Alan Boyle
    • Joe Purcell
    Sean McGinley
    Sean McGinley
    • Sergeant
    Peter Gowen
    Peter Gowen
    • Leddy
    Andrew Fullerton
    • Phillip Nugent
    Aisling O'Sullivan
    • Ma Brady
    John Kavanagh
    John Kavanagh
    • Dr. Boyd
    Rosaleen Linehan
    • Mrs. Canning
    Anita Reeves
    • Mrs. Coyle
    Gina Moxley
    • Mary
    Niall Buggy
    • Father Dom
    Ian Hart
    Ian Hart
    • Uncle Alo
    Anne O'Neill
    • Mrs. McGlone
    Joe Pilkington
    • Charlie McGlone
    Pat McGrath
    • Farmer on Tractor
    Jer O'Leary
    Jer O'Leary
    • Dublin Man
    • Director
      • Neil Jordan
    • Writers
      • Pat McCabe
      • Neil Jordan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews76

    7.111.8K
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    Featured reviews

    Steve-176

    Lurid And Exuberant

    The Butcher Boy is exuberant, funny and horrific. It's passionate and inventive and unforgettable. The Butcher Boy was directed by Irishman Neil Jordan who's previous films are impressive. They include The Crying Game, Mona Lisa, Interview With A Vampire, and Michael Collins.

    The Butcher Boy is based on a novel by Patrick McCabe who also co-wrote the screen play. I'm very pleased to relate that The Butcher Boy isn't based on a true story!!! I sure hope it isn't anyway.

    The Butcher Boy is about a lad who commits a horrific murder in a rural Irish town. But the film certainly isn't solemn. Jordan has enlivened an essentially gory tale with a touch of inventive, sometimes humorous magic realism (a bewigged Sinead O'Connor plays The Virgin Mary). Jordan is also blessed by having available a wonderfully gifted leading actor.

    Fifteen year old Eamonn Owens, a schoolboy in real life from near where The Butcher Boy was shot, plays 12 year old Francie Brady. Francie finds himself betrayed. His dad (Stephen Rea) is a drunk, his Ma (Aisling O'Sullivan) is suicidal. His best friend lets him down. The township and it's institutions aren't supportive. He eventually takes his revenge.

    The boy also has visions. We could say he's imaginative as children should be, but this boy is cheerfully violent as well. The Butcher Boy doesn't discuss cause and effect at all, but such is the power of the film, most viewers will wonder how such a thing could happen. Was Francie schizophrenic? Was he a psychopath. If he had had a stable loving family what might have happened?

    Regardless, Eamonn Owens is just terrific as the cheerful, energetic, often very funny Francie Brady. This red headed bundle of uninhibited, unselfconscious energy has created a very memorable screen character indeed. Neil Jordan must have been tickled pink to have such a lead for his film.

    Leading English stage actress Fiona Shaw plays the prissy Mrs Nugent and Irish stalwart, Milo (the eyebrows) O'Shea plays a meddlesome priest. Stephen Rea fans won't find much to celebrate since Rea doesn't do much more than look drunk, sit, and kick in a television, but that's because The Butcher Boy quite rightly revolves around the wonderful, funny and bloody Eamonn Owens. See The Butcher Boy if you can.
    ~PL~

    Weird but great!

    The Butcher Boy is a very weird film...This boy Francie has a bad influence; his father. His father is a violent man, alcoholic, but he loves his son a lot...This boy is very well played by Eamonn Owens, a young actor I didn't know before who surely worths a look at his performance. Stephen Rea is perfect in the role of the violent father, and Fiona Shaw is great in the role of a woman who hates Francie, because he beats up her son. But Francie is dangerous...The story is a mix of fear, hate, madness, happiness, that is mixed up in that little boy's brain. Sometimes, he's the good boy who protects his mother and sometimes he is the murderer...Francie is full of contradictions, and he tries to put happiness and death together. The narrator is very funny, but sometimes tells innapropriate things for the images we watch...but that's the psychotic part of it...incredibly well-shot, this film deserves lots of attention. I bought it for five stupid dollars...and Lost In Space was fifteen dollars...and the video sold it because of the lack of rentals...well, too bad for this video, they have one less good film on the shelf.... Neil Jordan brought us The Crying Game, Interview With The Vampire, In Dreams and some other good films...but I believe this one is his finest job...it's like watching Sleepers, Psycho and A Clockwork Orange at the same time. One thing that could be a problem; the accent of the characters when they speak...but I was happy to see that it was not set in the United States...Great film... I give it 85% and maybe it deserves better.
    8thinker1691

    " You've won, Mrs. Nugent, Joe is gone forever "

    During the 1960's people were fearful of losing their world. What with the Cuban Missle Crises and the threat of Nuclear Winter, it's little wonder many hid in prayerful disillusion. For two young Irish boys, something loomed closer. Their lives encompassed their town, their family and their friendship. The first is Joe Purcell (Alan Boyle) a typical Irish boy out to enjoy his youth. The second is his best and closest friend named Francis Brady (Eamonn Owens) who becomes the unlikely hero in the movie, "The Butcher Boy." To Joe, friendship is a temporary bond which enhances life with laughter, pranks and boyhood imagination. But to Francis Brady, friendship is permanent and indelible which nothing on the planet, including Atomic fire, can separate. Enter, the boy's Nemesis, the town gossip and constant irritation to their bond. Mrs. Nugent, (Fiona Shaw) sees the boys as lowly delinquents, petty trouble makers, vicious bullies and future criminals. During the escalating conflict, the audience watches as Francis loses many of the people he loves. Eventually, Mrs. Nugent causes him to lose his best friend. Vengefully, Francis marks her for ultimate punishment. Audiences must decided the boy's reason for his erratic behavior. Was it his drunken father's (Stephen Rea) physical abuse, his mother's suicidal tendencies, incarceration at reform school, becoming a victim of sexual abuse by Father Sullivan (Milo O'Shea), subsequent shock treatments, increasing mental delusions of space aliens or iconic religious figures. It's little wonder Francsis commits the ultimate act of revenge. This is an honest, straight forward movie, which depicts the inner workings of a fragile but psychotic boy in crises. Many people allow maturity to transform them into adults, but some refuse, paying the inevitable price for doing so. ****
    Bureacrat85

    Dark whimsy and originality

    This film is as shocking and horrific as it was funny and touching. In a world of many heartless films that are shallow, annoying, and predictable or insensitive and too dramatic, this movie balanced all it's elements wonderfully. It's a tale of Francie Brady, a young Irish lad in the early Cold War, who at first has a lot of playful mischief and a deep heart for those closest to him. Yet as the film progresses so does the Francie's problems and so does the darkness within him as he tries to hold on and protect what little he was born with. His drunken father, who has a great knack with the trumpet, loves his family but his pain seems to override his tenderness. His mother is caught in the struggle of being a good mother and fighting her own inner demons, which ultimately consumes her. Francie invests much of his faith into his best friend Joe, a calmer but good-humored boy. But even the deepest of friendships suffer from the pressure of society, as Joe abandons Francie for a more conforming lifestyle. As all of Francie's allies leave him, insanity and anger take over his mind. He plunges into a life a wild and frantic searching and destruction. He takes out much of this anger on a critical and harsh neighbor, in a gruesome scene (which is funny considering how it differs from most of the Hollywood bull). Francie's escapades lead him to hospitalization. We then meet the adult Francie years later as he is released. We see the eager boy who grew into a lunatic and now has settled into a state of sad yet conventional behavior, but a good old friend (which was once a part of his insanity) comes back to comfort him. This film may be eerie and unconventional but that is what adds to it brilliance and fantastical charm. Viewer Note: I'll never look at a pile of cabbage the same way again
    9CTzen

    Just an EXCELLENT movie

    I don't understand how this movie is so unknown by most of the people.

    Simply put, this is an amazing film. Eamonn Owens' performance is just unbelievable.

    There are some serious and sensitives themes in this movie (murder, suicidal thoughts, alcoholism, child abuse, religion) however it's not a disturbing movie (it has its moments though). The reason for the lack of disturbance in this film is because we're seeing everything from the perspective of a little boy.

    The Butcher Boy is, for sure, one of the best dark comedies/dramas that I've seen. Highly recommendable.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Stephen Rea is credited as only playing Pa in the film, but he also plays the adult Francie, who narrates his story in voice-overs throughout the film, uncredited.
    • Quotes

      [the Blessed Virgin Mary is exasperated by the Butcher Boy's slowness to act]

      Our Lady: For fuck's sake, Francie!...

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: My Giant/The Odd Couple II/City of Angels/The Player's Club/The Big One/The Butcher Boy (1998)
    • Soundtracks
      Mack the Knife
      Written by Kurt Weill / Bertolt Brecht

      European American Music Corp. / Warner / Chappell Music, Inc. / Universal Edition A.G.

      Performed by Santo & Johnny

      Courtesy of BMG Entertainment International UK & IRL Ltd.

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 6, 1998 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Ireland
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Butcher Boy
    • Filming locations
      • Clones, County Monaghan, Ireland
    • Production company
      • Butcher Boy Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,995,911
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $135,606
      • Apr 5, 1998
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,995,911
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 50m(110 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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