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Le clan des bêtes

Original title: Bring Them Down
  • 2024
  • 12 avec avertissement
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
4.6K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,853
1,071
Christopher Abbott and Barry Keoghan in Le clan des bêtes (2024)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer1:39
2 Videos
27 Photos
Psychological ThrillerDramaThriller

An Irish shepherding family thrust into battle on several fronts: internal strife, hostility within the family, rivalry with another farmer. Paternalism, heritage, and the generational traum... Read allAn Irish shepherding family thrust into battle on several fronts: internal strife, hostility within the family, rivalry with another farmer. Paternalism, heritage, and the generational trauma cycle through the cultural prism of Ireland.An Irish shepherding family thrust into battle on several fronts: internal strife, hostility within the family, rivalry with another farmer. Paternalism, heritage, and the generational trauma cycle through the cultural prism of Ireland.

  • Director
    • Chris Andrews
  • Writers
    • Chris Andrews
    • Jonathan Hourigan
  • Stars
    • Christopher Abbott
    • Barry Keoghan
    • Colm Meaney
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    4.6K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,853
    1,071
    • Director
      • Chris Andrews
    • Writers
      • Chris Andrews
      • Jonathan Hourigan
    • Stars
      • Christopher Abbott
      • Barry Keoghan
      • Colm Meaney
    • 31User reviews
    • 60Critic reviews
    • 63Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:39
    Official Trailer
    Official Teaser
    Trailer 0:42
    Official Teaser
    Official Teaser
    Trailer 0:42
    Official Teaser

    Photos27

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    Top cast15

    Edit
    Christopher Abbott
    Christopher Abbott
    • Michael
    Barry Keoghan
    Barry Keoghan
    • Jack
    Colm Meaney
    Colm Meaney
    • Ray
    Nora-Jane Noone
    Nora-Jane Noone
    • Caroline
    Paul Ready
    Paul Ready
    • Gary
    Aaron Heffernan
    Aaron Heffernan
    • Lee
    Susan Lynch
    Susan Lynch
    • Peggy
    Conor MacNeill
    Conor MacNeill
    • Nathan
    Adam Behan
    Adam Behan
    • Daniel
    Diarmuid de Faoite
    Diarmuid de Faoite
    • James
    Gail Fitzpatrick
    • Butcher
    Grace Daly
    • Teenage Caroline
    Eddie Drew
    • Mart Manager
    Danny Power
    Danny Power
    • Runner
    Tom Leavey
    Tom Leavey
    • Farmer
    • (credit only)
    • Director
      • Chris Andrews
    • Writers
      • Chris Andrews
      • Jonathan Hourigan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    6.54.6K
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    Featured reviews

    7b4youwatch

    Simple storyline but heart touching messages

    This movie has a really simple storyline when you look at it overall. But the director's craft and filming style make it much more engaging, and on top of that, it brings a fresh cinematic experience that we don't often see. One of the things I really liked about this film was the music score. They used a sound that resembles a pulsating beat but blended it with a traditional instrumental feel, which added an intense and unique atmosphere to the film. Since the movie is a thriller set in a rural area, the cinematography is stunning. However, there are quite a few handheld camera shots, which make certain scenes feel more immersive. While that works well for some moments, like close up tension-building shots, it does make action sequences like running or car chases harder to follow at times. When it comes to acting, the performances were solid, and Barry's performance stood out as the best in the film. The movie also does a great job of portraying deep emotional struggles-how parental conflicts affect children, the trauma of losing something precious, and how unresolved emotions can push someone into a state of complete mental breakdown. It also highlights the unintended consequences of human ego in a way that feels incredibly raw and real. These are the elements that make this film truly unforgettable.
    7CinemaSerf

    Bring Them Down

    We start with a fairly traumatic car accident that goes some way in explaining just why, many years later, the sheep farming "Michael" (Christopher Abbott) is living with his immobile dad (Colm Meaney) and living a fairly unfulfilled life. Their neighbour calls to advise that a couple of his rams have been found dead on their farm and so when he goes to investigate, we meet "Caroline" (Nora-Jane Noone) who used to be his girlfriend before she left him for "Gary" (Paul Ready) and they had son "Jack" (Barry Keoghan). With no evidence of the corpses, he heads to the market to buy replacements only to find that his neighbours haven't been straight with him and that there's quite enough history here to ensure that "Michael" keeps his mouth shut. Meantime, things aren't proving much better for the couple next door as their farm is struggling to pay it's way and when their young son comes up with an unilateral scheme with his thuggish cousin "Lee" (Aaron Heffernan) to raise, rather brutally, some extra cash then things turn violent and dangerous now with just about every element of trust out the window! This isn't a mystery for the squeamish as it highlights some of the real difficulties faced by hill farmers facing financial difficulties trying to make their inhospitable land pay. The story itself here is a bit of a mess, and though it does gradually start to make a little sense towards the end, for the most part it seems a little too thinly stretched and reliant on the time-shifting chronology to tell us an under-characterised story from differing perspectives as the threads rather far-fetchedly come together at the end. It's a fine looking film offering an authentic look at a barely better than subsistence form of life populated by folks suspicious of newcomers and of each other, but I couldn't help but feel this needed a much firmer hand on the storytelling front and Keoghan just too old for the part. Abbott delivers well, and it's still worth a watch - but television in due course ought to be fine.
    7Pairic

    Beckettian Bog Western

    Bring Them Down: A savage tale of feuding hill farmers, sheep stoen, sheep mutilated, just their legs cut off to be sold. All tied in with a car crash which took place twenty years before but the consequences of which still impinge on pent day events. This was advertised as being partially a comedy but the few comedic moments are bleak and the laughter will likely choke in yiur throat. Not just animals but humans also suffer terrible deaths and injuries. In the second half of the film some of the events we have already observed are revisited and we achieve a clearer understanding of what is really going on. Non-linear narratives often enhance a film but I don't believe it does so in this instance. Good performances from Barry Keoghan, Colm Meaney, Christopher Abbot, Paul Ready and Nora-Jane Noone even if Keoghan is getting a bit long on the tooth to be playing a teenager. Maybe an Irish Hatfields & McCoys or a Beckettian Bog Western. Written and Directed by Christopher Andrews. 7/10.
    8Papaya_Horror

    A Blood-Soaked Feud in the Fog of Guilt

    Christopher Andrews' "Bring Them Down" (2024) unfolds like a storm on the horizon; slow-building, inevitable, and impossible to escape

    It's a dark fable about grief, guilt, and generational violence wrapped in the raw sinew of a rural Irish revenge tale. But to call it merely a revenge film is too simple. This is a story of festering wounds, both literal and metaphorical, where the past clings like mud on boots and the future is as uncertain as the mist that blankets the hills.

    Set against the desolate beauty of Ireland's sheep-farming countryside, the film follows Michael (Christopher Abbott, in a stunning performance that required him to learn Irish for full authenticity), a man crushed under the weight of an old tragedy - a car crash that took his mother's life, leaving his then-girlfriend, Caroline (Nora-Jane Noone), permanently scarred. Hers is a face marked by past violence, a visible reminder of the destruction left in the wake of unchecked male rage.

    Now, Michael exists in a limbo of quiet guilt, tending to his father's flock, his penance written in solitude and labor. But when two of his rams go missing, his search reignites an ancient feud, one that will demand fresh blood to settle old debts.

    There's something Biblical about Bring Them Down, and not just in its themes of sacrifice and retribution. The violence, when it comes, is wrathful - sudden, punishing, and without mercy. The camera, once composed and watchful, shifts into a frantic, handheld panic, mirroring the chaos that erupts when civility and restraint finally give way.

    It's the kind of horror that doesn't just shock - it lingers, staining the landscape like a permanent bruise.

    Abbott delivers a brooding, internal performance, his face a mask of quiet suffering. But it's Nora-Jane Noone's Caroline who haunts the film. Hers is the kind of presence that reminds you this isn't just a movie about men and their burdens - it's about the collateral damage they leave behind.

    Her scar, a physical mark of past violence, is a stark contrast to Michael's invisible but equally deep wounds.

    Barry Keoghan (Jack) and Paul Ready (Gary) deliver standout performances, each embodying a deceptive innocence rooted in old grudges that refuse to fade. Their characters may live in a world that's changing - where technology advances and the local economy shifts - but some feuds run deeper than progress.

    And as Gary sets his sights on modernizing the land with vacation homes-Airbnb, really?-the past proves it won't be so easily buried.

    And then there's the land itself - windswept, vast, and unforgiving. Andrews, in his feature debut, frames it as both prison and battleground. The sheep farm, the rolling hills, the looming modern development of Gary's (Paul Ready) vacation homes - all of it speaks to a world moving forward while its inhabitants remain shackled to their histories.

    At its core, "Bring Them Down" is about cycles. Cycles of violence. Cycles of guilt. Cycles of men making the same mistakes over and over, too stubborn or broken to step away from the path carved for them.

    The question Andrews poses is as old as time itself - can these cycles ever be broken? Or are some sins too deep to be forgiven?

    Bleak, gripping, and punctuated by moments of pitch-black humor, "Bring Them Down" isn't just a story about vengeance - it's about the ghosts we inherit, the wounds we pass down, and the weight of a past that refuses to stay buried.
    8kevin_robbins

    Bring Them Down is a fascinating and unique circumstantial drama that's worth a watch.

    My wife and I watched the Irish film 🇮🇪 Bring Them Down (2024) in theaters this evening. The storyline follows two Irish families struggling to survive for different reasons. Their sheep share the same hill, which causes one family to take advantage of the situation to try and get ahead. Violence ensues to protect their livestock and future.

    This film is directed by Christopher Andrews, in his directorial debut, and stars Barry Keoghan (Saltburn), Christopher Abbott (Possessor), Colm Meaney (Layer Cake), and Nora-Jane Noone (The Descent).

    This is one of those films that gives you a glimpse into a unique and unpredictable lifestyle of survival. The acting is elite, but the cinematography is even better, with beautiful landscapes and backdrops. The dog-eat-dog world of their circumstances is well depicted and sad. There are some unbelievable twists and turns, and the movie does a great job of telling the story from both families' perspectives. The conclusion is the only way the journey could end.

    In conclusion, Bring Them Down is a fascinating and unique circumstantial drama that's worth a watch. I would score this 7.5/10 and recommend watching it once.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Paul Mescal and Tom Burke were originally cast in the lead roles but both ended up dropping out after the project was stuck in development and were replaced by Barry Keoghan and Christopher Abbott.
    • Quotes

      Ray: Hello. Who? And what did he do with them? Well, she shouldn't have. He shouldn't have!

    • Connections
      Referenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 990: Sinners (2025)
    • Soundtracks
      Among The Trees
      Performed by Michael Chapman

      Written by Michael Chapman

      Published by TRO - Westminster Music, LTD

      Courtesy of Bucks Music Group Limited & BBC Studios

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 23, 2025 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Ireland
      • United Kingdom
      • Belgium
    • Official site
      • Official Site
    • Languages
      • English
      • Irish Gaelic
    • Also known as
      • Bring Them Down
    • Production companies
      • MUBI
      • Tailored Films
      • Wild Swim Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $336,339
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $202,329
      • Feb 9, 2025
    • Gross worldwide
      • $567,895
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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