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Le clan des bêtes

Original title: Bring Them Down
  • 2024
  • 12 avec avertissement
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
4.4K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,492
743
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
    4.4K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,492
    743
    • Director
      • Chris Andrews
    • Writers
      • Chris Andrews
      • Jonathan Hourigan
    • Stars
      • Christopher Abbott
      • Barry Keoghan
      • Colm Meaney
    • 30User reviews
    • 59Critic 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 reviews30

    6.54.3K
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    Featured reviews

    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.
    8steiner-sam

    The sins of the father have unpredictable results

    It's a conflict drama between neighboring Irish sheep farmers based on faulty talking, faulty listening, and quick tempers. Michael O'Shea (Christopher Abbott) lives with his bitter, disabled father, Ray (Colm Meaney). Before the titles, we learn that 20 years before, Michael recklessly drove a car into an accident that killed his mother, who had just told Michael she was leaving his father, and seriously injured his girlfriend, Caroline (Nora-Jane Noone). Caroline eventually married the next-door farmer, Gary (Paul Ready), and they had a son, now an older teenager, Jack (Barry Keoghan).

    Events unfold in escalating hostility between the neighbors, though Caroline tries to maintain the peace. The film's first half tells the story from Michael's perspective; the second half is more from Jack's perspective. When seen together, we learn that accusations based on faulty assumptions and distorted memories lead to increasing violence. The film ends when things have gone too far.

    "Bring Them Down" has a double meaning--bringing the sheep down from the hills in winter and bringing down the evil neighbor. The non-linear nature of the story demands focused attention throughout but is rewarding. Abbott, Keoghan, and Noone are excellent. Meaney is memorable but a bit clichéd.
    7Pjtaylor-96-138044

    The baa sheeps of Connemara.

    'Bring Them Down (2024)' is a bleak tale of rivalry, isolation, bitterness, generational trauma and an escalating cycle of vengeance. Focused on a pair of father-son farming families who find themselves in conflict without ever really knowing who struck the first blow or why (or, even, what counts as the first blow), the feature is essentially one long spiral into tragedy. Each time our lonely protagonist is wronged, we want to see him get retribution, all while knowing that doing so won't end well for anybody. Just when we feel we have a handle on things, the narrative winds back the clock to provide an alternate perspective and essentially reveal the reasons behind its chaotic chain of events. The information the back half presents isn't entirely revelatory, nor does it excuse the behaviour exhibited by its previously more mysterious characters, but it does double down on the sadness at the story's core by showcasing how much of what happens is a product of misguided youth rather than malicious intent. A mistake spirals into more mistakes, an insecurity leads to unspeakable cruelty, a brutal request is fulfilled before it's ever solidified as being expected. Things near the verge of potentially peacefully resolving only when it's already too late to stop them. The wound has been struck, the other eye is sought. The only question is: will mercy finally win? No matter the case, nobody comes out of this unscathed. Everything is irrevocably changed forever, and this downfall comes seemingly out of nowhere. Pettiness costs lives. Revenge satisfies no-one. One's own actions bring them down, and there's no getting back up.

    The film is incredibly engaging, with an inky atmosphere and an underlying brutality that contrasts with its gorgeous countryside setting. The performances are pitch-perfect, an amalgamation of anger and toxicity and sadness and loneliness and misguided attempts at making things better. The father lets down the son, just as the son lets down the father. Although Barry Keoghan is great, he's definitely too old for this role; his character is seemingly meant to be a teenager, or in his early twenties at the latest, and so much of what he does is informed by his youthful naiveté. He's much easier to understand if you keep in mind that he's immature, essentially still a child who craves nothing more than a happy family who love him despite his flaws. However, Christopher Abbot is bang on the money, carrying a tangible weight in his every scene and mixing gentleness with a capacity for violence incredibly convincingly. He also does a great job with his accent and Gaelic-language lines, feeling right at home alongside his Irish co-stars (including a grumpy, chair-bound Colm Meaney as his not-very-nice father). The direction is really confident, making excellent use of silence and letting the performers do their magic even when there's no dialogue. The cinematography is really effective at conveying both the beauty and harshness of the environment, and the nighttime sequences toe the line between genuine darkness and necessary clarity remarkably well. The whole affair just has this really realistic texture to it, keeping things grounded even when it's plot is at its most contrived (which isn't very, by the way). It's a compelling, immersive experience and it's made even more impressive by the fact that it's a directorial debut. Comparisons to 'The Banshees Of Inisherin (2022)' are inevitable, but this is by no means a rip-off of that much more (darkly) comedic effort. It's its own beast, and it deserves to be considered as such. It's a tense, downbeat experience that often puts a knot in your stomach and keeps it there, all while conveying a sense of sadness that makes you want to put your arms around almost everyone you see and give them a hug that says "everything's going to be alright". It's a tough watch at times (especially if you're an animal lover), but it isn't dour for the sake of it. It's an entertainingly upsetting drama that keeps you hooked from start to finish.
    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.
    6curtispeace

    6 for unique storyline sort of

    Sheep sheep lots of sheep sheep those who are stealers of sheep and those who mutilate sheep for monetary benefit believe it or not and a story of a family who has taken care of sheep for 500 years I guess a movie with good actors playing okay here I am Debbie Downer playing dumb roles dumb characters who basically do dumb things and seem to have no ability to make any good decisions nobody in the whole movie makes really a good decision or they make a half baked one and then go to do what they plan but don't really do what they thought they were going to do sounds like real life but this is not like real life it's just kooky and it ends kooky and the protagonist who isn't a bad feller gets the raw end of the sheep I mean of the stick okay of the sheep it's not really a good movie I endured it but I would not recommend it because it goes round and round and ends up as movies seem to do these days nowhere it's a story that didn't need to be told or made into a movie it's quite dissatisfying and if anyone says it's good or worth watching don't believe it don't believe it baaaaa baaaaaaaa baaaa.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    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
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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