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Outcast

  • 2010
  • R
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
Niall Bruton and Hanna Stanbridge in Outcast (2010)
Trailer for Outcast
Play trailer0:38
4 Videos
17 Photos
Supernatural FantasySupernatural HorrorFantasyHorror

A beast stalks an estate where two lovers are breaking up and two magic users are on a hunt.A beast stalks an estate where two lovers are breaking up and two magic users are on a hunt.A beast stalks an estate where two lovers are breaking up and two magic users are on a hunt.

  • Director
    • Colm McCarthy
  • Writers
    • Colm McCarthy
    • Tom K. McCarthy
  • Stars
    • Kate Dickie
    • Niall Bruton
    • Hanna Stanbridge
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    2.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Colm McCarthy
    • Writers
      • Colm McCarthy
      • Tom K. McCarthy
    • Stars
      • Kate Dickie
      • Niall Bruton
      • Hanna Stanbridge
    • 43User reviews
    • 41Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos4

    Outcast
    Trailer 0:38
    Outcast
    Outcast
    Trailer 0:39
    Outcast
    Outcast
    Trailer 0:39
    Outcast
    Outcast
    Clip 1:14
    Outcast
    Outcast
    Featurette 0:57
    Outcast

    Photos16

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    + 11
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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Kate Dickie
    Kate Dickie
    • Mary
    Niall Bruton
    • Fergal
    Hanna Stanbridge
    Hanna Stanbridge
    • Petronella
    Josh Whitelaw
    • Tomatsk
    Therese Bradley
    Therese Bradley
    • Jitta
    James Nesbitt
    James Nesbitt
    • Cathal
    Ciarán McMenamin
    Ciarán McMenamin
    • Liam
    Sean McCarthy
    • Old Hands
    Fiona O'Shaughnessy
    Fiona O'Shaughnessy
    • Niamh
    Christine Tremarco
    Christine Tremarco
    • Housing Officer
    Karen Gillan
    Karen Gillan
    • Ally
    Andrew Martin
    • James
    Daniel Portman
    Daniel Portman
    • Paul
    • (as Daniel Porter)
    Wendy Wason
    Wendy Wason
    • Barmaid
    • (as Wendy Wasson)
    James Cosmo
    James Cosmo
    • Laird
    Ian Whyte
    Ian Whyte
    • Beast
    Jody Monteith
    • Youth
    Alex McSherry
    • Coroner
    • Director
      • Colm McCarthy
    • Writers
      • Colm McCarthy
      • Tom K. McCarthy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews43

    5.32.8K
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    Featured reviews

    8Coventry

    Unique and Refreshing Irish/Scottish Horror

    "Outcast" looked like one of the most anonymous and modest titles that were scheduled in this year's edition of the Brussels Festival of Fantastic Films, but I'm nevertheless very glad that I went to see it, as this was one of the most imaginative & courageously ambitious stories in a long time. The film is still quite flawed and lacks steadiness, but it's most definitely a welcome chance of pace from the nowadays overload of brainless slashers and tepid remakes. Strange as it may sound, "Outcast" is a fusion between fantasy horror and social drama. And it works, too! Imagine yourself an alliance between directors Ken Loach, with his typical proletariat setting and characters, and Mike Newell how he directed "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire". The convoluted plot, courtesy of the brothers Tom and Colm McCarthy, hints at multiple themes and maintains a mysterious atmosphere throughout, but still unfolds as a coherent and surefooted horror story. Mary and her shy adolescent son Fergal carry a sinister secret with them. This secret forces them to continuously move between cities, because they're hunted down by a couple of warriors that use black magic to track them down. They end up in a lower class apartment block in Edinburgh, where the unworldly Feral promptly falls for the local foul-mouthed and feisty Petronella. Mary desperately tries to boycott the relationship, especially because she senses the hunters Cathal and Liam approaching, but the love is for real. Meanwhile, the family's aforementioned secret is spreading mayhem and terror in the grisly Edinburgh neighborhood. I know this is all very vague, but it would really be a shame to reveal too much about the widely versatile story. The script features Irish folklore elements as well as Scottish mythology, and everything wonderfully merges together with the grim and depressing setting. In fact, everything in this movie merges together well, even the hardcore gory massacres with the genuinely touching romance sub plot. The acting is great, with particularly the young Hanna Stanbridge excelling above the rest. She even makes the plebs Scottish accent sound like poetry; what a marvelous girl.
    6JvH48

    Interesting ingredients, but the net result did not fully explore its potential

    I saw this film as part of the "Imagine" film festival 2011 in Amsterdam. The synopsis sounded promising, but the end result could have been much better, even with identical ingredients. Several story lines and related characters were not exploited fully, and the plot offered much more potential. There is also a plus side: the casting was very good, and the acting was believable throughout. For a film of this category, the latter is essential.

    In the first half hour an overwhelming series of characters passes by, alas without proper introduction how they were related and what made them tick. The synopsis as published by the film festival, did not offer much to tie things together. And last but not least, the dialect did not help either (though considering myself reasonably fluent in English, part of the dialog escaped me).

    The initial confusion disappeared later on. The story got some flesh gradually in the last hour, and something was beginning to happen. That was where the horror element became apparent. Unexplainable things occurred, but we were left in the dark what was underneath all those events. In other words, precisely what we came for.

    I'm not sure about the explicit and uncontrolled violence throughout the story. For example, the audible breaking of someone's fingers one by one, in an attempt to extract information, is very unpleasant to watch and hear. We also saw a lot of self mutilation, with blood riddled results, but that was an inherent part of the story line, hence fitting its purpose. Nevertheless, I saw much more uncontrolled violence than I was prepared for, even in the context of this film festival.

    All in all, when leaving the theater I gave a "so so" rating for the public prize competition. As said above, there were a lot of promising ingredients, but the end result was much less than could be achieved with a bit more thought on character exposition and story development.
    8oOgiandujaOo_and_Eddy_Merckx

    Cauldron of angst and desire

    This was really just meant to be a filler film for me at the Edinburgh International Film Festival, I just thought I'd cram in as many films as possible and went along to a late night showing of Outcast.

    It was actually really really good, and compared to the pap you get to see these days if you turn up at the cinema expecting horror fare, extraordinary. Successful horror plunges deep into fears that we have, here there's some really good stuff about sexual insecurity and fear of one's own burgeoning sexuality during adolescence, fear of pregnancy, fear of homelessness, anger about parental domination.

    It's a story about Mary (played by Kate Dickie - the lead in Red Road) and her adolescent son Fergal (Niall Bruton). They're on the run and hiding in an Edinburgh housing estate. The mother clearly has supernatural capabilities and is being hunted by Cathal (James Nesbitt) who has been temporarily given similar supernatural capabilities. It's a ritualistic hunt. Nesbitt usually plays debonair blarney-spouting roles but is cast against type as the baddie here, which is quite refreshing.

    There's some sort of underground feudalism going on as well, as Cathal crosses territory and has to ask a gentleman called The Laird for permission to hunt on his grounds. Maybe some secret yearnings for the feudal past going on here. What works well with all the supernatural stuff is that it's hinted that there are much larger issues at play, but these are left as mysterious.

    Fergal wants to hang with Petronella, a lovely wee lassie with a short skirt who is intent on laying him from the moment he arrives on the estate. There's a good young love story here and as well a good sex scene. Mary is very keen for Fergal to stay away from Petronella and insistently suppresses him. There are some very creepy scenes where Mary dominates Fergal and warns him away from girls.

    The special effects scenes work really well, but I don't want to spoil those for you, I would just say though that I felt they produced a good personification of some of the fears I've been referring to.

    Anyway this is a film I would describe as a cauldron of angst and desire, I think it deserves to be seen, the audience applauded spontaneously at the end, if it didn't at least get a wide release in Scotland, that would be a tragedy. Walking back to my hotel that night (a long walk) was damned spooky given I was in the location of the movie!
    6mike_brunton

    One of the better 'horror' movies out there recently

    First off, I don't understand why some people were so critical of this film. Having watched countless terrible so called movies from the horror genre this last year, very few could hold my attention. Yes, I will agree, it started of a wee bit slow, and yes at times you didn't know who to like more, the hunters or the hunted. Personally I thought this was quite refreshing. The setting was wonderful for an ex-pat Scot like myself, it's a pity more movies aren't made in Scotland. Of course there are parallels with Let me in, but the whole gypsy/druidic slant was nice and the acting on the whole was more than adequate and a lot better than low budget American movies where recently the actors seem to be hitting all time new lows in believability or likability. I thought this film kept my interest right up to the end, the ending wasn't as predictable as people make out, as the director really did paint quite a ambiguous slant to the main protagonist (or was that protagonists?). Anyway, for all fans of Edinburgh and people who want more from a horror movie than just another slasher psycho you should come away with few disappointments. Serious thrills are few, so I might well put this more in a supernatural category rather than horror. I think the problem with recent horror is it's hard to top the excesses of Saw and few have the storytelling genius of a director like Guillermo Del Toro to eke out a superb horror without an excess of gore. To sum up, a good attempt at a Scottish LET ME IN, not incredible but compared with recent dross a must see for horror fans who are waiting in vain for another great film like The Shining.
    6elaine-105

    Weird, cheap but strangely compelling

    What do you get if you cross the plot of Let The Right One In with the special effects of a budget Hulk movie, then set it all in Trainspotting territory, with a bunch of Irish Gypsy mumbo jumbo thrown in for good measure. Well, fairly obviously, you get low budget horror thriller Outcast.

    Intense, witchy Mary and her teenage son Fergal (Kate Dickie and Niall Bruton) are on the run. But when they set fire to their van and accept a scummy council tenancy in a run-down scheme on the outskirts of Edinburgh, it appears that their days on the road are over. Big mistake, as mysterious, tattooed, radge hit-man Cathal (James Nesbitt) is hot on their heels, tracking them down using bizarre divining rituals involving pigeons' entrails. Well, it's hardly as if the reclusive pair are on Facebook.

    But while Mary sets about weaving protective spells around their flat, Fergal is off getting to know his new neighbourhood, and in particular feisty 'teenager' Petronella (Hanna Stanbridge), who spends her days caring for her mentally disabled brother while her alcoholic mother lies sprawled on the sofa sleeping off the grog. But as a sudden, awkward and rather unlikely romance starts to blossom, Cal is closing in, having been given the go ahead by the local gypsy king or Laird (played, of course, by James Cosmo, as it is illegal to make a film in Scotland without offering him a part).

    All sounds a bit strange. Well, it is, but it's also gory, gritty and weirdly compelling – although not always terribly convincing. Perhaps I just have trouble believing there's black magic taking place on my bus route. Or indeed that such cheesy, playground black magic could be so immediately effective – Rosemary's Baby this ain't.

    But that aside, this is a brave film that's genuinely trying to do something different, and while the result is at times cheap and patchy, it's also like nothing you've seen before, a sort of dysfunctional Mike Leigh film for the Twilight generation.

    Now where did I put my jar of blood and pile of dead birds? I'm off to cast a spell on a traffic warden…

    See more of my reviews at www.elainemacintyre.net 8-)

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The book Mary gives Fergal for his birthday is "Titus Alone", the concluding volume in the 'Gormenghast' trilogy by Mervyn Peake. In the book, Titus, the heir to the castle of Gormenghast, decides voluntarily to cut himself off from his ancestral home and not to claim his heritage; rather like the choice which Mary is expecting Fergal to make in the film.
    • Goofs
      The flat offered to the couple near the beginning is completely squalid, containing dead birds, nests etc. No council would offer a home in this condition as they are required by law to provide safe and sanitary accommodation. They certainly would not say that tenants are expected to make 'an effort' to pass it off as suitable for use.
    • Quotes

      Niamh: How did you know I was pregnant?

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Outcast?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 10, 2010 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Ireland
    • Official site
      • Bankside Films
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Вигнанці
    • Filming locations
      • Studio Solas, Ballinahown, County Galway, Ireland
    • Production companies
      • Bankside Films
      • Bord Scannán na hÉireann / The Irish Film Board
      • Scottish Screen
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $179
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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