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IMDbPro

An Irish Angel

  • 2024
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
149
YOUR RATING
An Irish Angel (2024)
Drama

Aine is a secondary school girl from the wrong side of the tracks, who lives in Portrush, NI with her mother Margaret who works as a cleaner for a local office and her grandmother Agnes who ... Read allAine is a secondary school girl from the wrong side of the tracks, who lives in Portrush, NI with her mother Margaret who works as a cleaner for a local office and her grandmother Agnes who has been diagnosed with terminal cancer.Aine is a secondary school girl from the wrong side of the tracks, who lives in Portrush, NI with her mother Margaret who works as a cleaner for a local office and her grandmother Agnes who has been diagnosed with terminal cancer.

  • Director
    • Danny Patrick
  • Writer
    • Danny Patrick
  • Stars
    • Julian Glover
    • Jaime Winstone
    • Lauren Staerck
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    149
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Danny Patrick
    • Writer
      • Danny Patrick
    • Stars
      • Julian Glover
      • Jaime Winstone
      • Lauren Staerck
    • 15User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos1

    An Irish Angel Trailer
    Trailer 2:16
    An Irish Angel Trailer

    Photos12

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    Top cast21

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    Julian Glover
    Julian Glover
    • Father Luke Reitel
    Jaime Winstone
    Jaime Winstone
    • Ellie
    Lauren Staerck
    • Morning Girls
    Danny Patrick
    Danny Patrick
    • Corinna's Dad
    Baz Black
    Baz Black
    • Padraig
    Leona Clarke
    • Esme Jackson
    Lauren Metcalfe
    Lauren Metcalfe
    • Corinna's mum
    Amanda Doherty
    • Margaret
    Paul O'Doherty
    • Jerome Jackson
    Shane Robinson
    Shane Robinson
    • The Strap…
    Emily Malkin
    • Morning Girls
    Jason Gerard
    • Andy
    Niamh James
    • Aine
    Todd Bell
    • Leo
    Ania Lee Lyes
    Ania Lee Lyes
    • Corinna Parkhouse
    Barry McFeely
    • Happy
    • (as Michael Barry)
    Joseph Dann
    Joseph Dann
    • Matt (King of Cool)
    Kathy Deehan
    • Agnes
    • Director
      • Danny Patrick
    • Writer
      • Danny Patrick
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    5.9149
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    Featured reviews

    7MovieGuruEurope

    Soars about typical Teen Fare

    The acclaimed dramedy "An Irish Angel" is ostensibly a tried but true tale of the misfit high school lass who longs to ditch her dreary existence, skip this one-horse hamlet and make it in the big city, except shes been knocked up.

    But as smartly written and directed by Danny Patrick the sum of these singularly familiar parts combine to take us to a place well beyond where we typically go with such fare. Taking the helm Patrick weaves an uncommonly engaging story. Deftly mixing healthy hits of both laughter and tears, he guides us on a journey every bit as eccentric as it is stirring.

    Not every movie has to have an enduring message. Still, "An Irish Angel" struck me with this one. The more we may try to distance ourselves from that which has come to define us, the more we are drawn ever nearer to it.

    And to appreciate the hell out of it.
    9tom-rogers-564-42136

    An absolute gem and one of the best independent films that has come out for a while! Well worth taking a chance on!

    This engaging dramatic-comedy from Danny Patrick is an absolute gem and one of the best independent films that has come out for a while. There are a number of divergent plot lines intricately woven, which culminate together in a highly climactic way, but the film still manages to maintain its charm and simplicity throughout. An Irish Angel works on a number of different levels, but foremost as an entertaining rites-of-passage teen movie, with numerous sophisticated elements that raise the movie well above its situated genre - especially the very cleverly conceived dream sequences that lend the movie an interesting art house feel.

    The main story thread follows teenager Aine, expertly played by newcomer Niamh James, who is struggling to come to terms with what exactly she is going to do about her unplanned pregnancy - which resulted from an unwise short-term fling with her school's "King of Cool" (who happens to be the boyfriend of her best friend, Corinna). She finds that the people in her life, including those she turns to for help, have confusingly different perspectives on what she should do, which only adds to her anxiety; but an encounter with an old priest, Fr Reital (warmly played by veteran English actor Julian Glover) triggers her entrance into a spiritual dreamscape where she explores her life dilemmas with a mysterious Christ-like figure - who just happens to look uncannily like her grumpy school caretaker, who everyone calls "The Strap" (brilliantly played by Shane Robinson). It's an example of how Patrick mixes kitchen sink drama with off-the-wall artistic vision in a combination which always intrigues.

    What really steals the show, however, is the exuberant performance of another young newcomer, Todd Bell, as Aine's school-friend and sidekick, Leo - a boy from the wrong side of the tracks, who aspires to be a famous actor. He gains the lead role as "Pulcinella" in the school play of the same name, directed by the school's liberal drama teacher, Ellie (Jamie Winstone - who seems made the part), and "Pulcinella" provides the movie with a number of apt thematic tropes as we go on. As the various plotlines develop, we follow the school rehearsals of the play, which constitutes an amusing parody of an Elizabethan drama (based on a 18th century Italian ballet), whose pseudo-Shakespearean dialogue seems to have been expressly created for the purpose by Patrick. Much of the comedy comes from Leo's wide-eyed aspirations for fame, and to make it with the play's leading lady (Aine's good-looking best-friend Corinna), which conflicts with the gritty reality of his life - especially as he becomes embroiled in the crazy schemes of an incompetent band of local wannabe gangsters, led by his brother Padraig (the gloriously tattooed Baz Back). This latter plotline ultimately leads to high drama, tragedy and pathos, and is important to the life-affirming conclusion to the movie.

    Altogether this is a funny, dramatic, and, at times, emotively profound movie, that punches far above its weight and is well worth taking a chance on.
    7dannymccafferty-53150

    Interesting Characters, Cliched plot

    I thought this movie was promising, premise wise. It was refreshing in the sense that it didn't feel like your average Independent Artsy Movie; it felt more or less like a movie with something to say. Which is charming actually, the cinematography is beautiful I loved it.

    To me this movie over delivered on some points, and undelivered in others. Like I said I liked the directing style, I liked how unconventional the characters looked. Mostly in films; teenagers are being physically portrayed as beauty pageant contestants or extremely good looking cheer leaders etc.. but over here they looked more realistic and believable as teenagers. I loved the way this movie represented the family unit, in that it wasn't too good to be true but wasn't too unreal either. Millions of Irish People probably grew up in such families which seems more relatable to the viewer.

    I have to focus on the ways in which this film fell short for me at least. The plot was very cliche, the same as every other coming of age movie. Teen finds herself pregnant, teen fights with parent to gain her independence, parent resist teen's independence and then teen starts rebelling out of frustration and so on.

    The plot was quite the cookie-cutter. It was predictable and we have seen it many times. The only difference is the setting & the characters really. I felt like the idea of the family going through "financial difficulties" was just thrown in for good measures. I kinda wished they threw that out of the plot all together, it didn't seem to actually affect the plot in anyway other than dramatic effect.

    So yeah, overall pretty good film but I felt it lacked on originality and it wasn't as "deep" as I had hoped it would be.
    9FunsunshineGal

    Laughter with Tears

    One of the things this film does exceptionally well is give us a snapshot of the experiences Aine 'Niamh James' has, while still filling each moment with so much meaning and emotion. This is not a film about a teenager actively going through the world, it is about being in your 30's and looking back at your teenage youth. An Irish Angel does not rest on any single experience for very long and this is because when we remember our youth, we don't remember everything, and we don't remember all the sides to the story, we just remember how the door slammed and everything went silent or how we used to stare longingly at the dream house a few streets away, wishing it were ours. The criticism that this film touches on too much and discusses too little, is a misconception that this is a play by play of a young woman forced into being an adult. This is how life is remembered, in moments, slivers, glances. More over, Danny Patrick creates a female lead character that is at once self-conscious and determined. She does not wilt or waver in her goals even despite the mistakes she's made. Aine is a new female lead that does not ask "what will I do now?" when something goes wrong. She simply keeps going, until she arrives.
    8balrogSunshine

    Postcard from your teenage years

    An Irish Angel is a lot like the time in which it takes place. The film has a lot of note to say, but you get the sense that it has a good time just being there. By 2017, The Good Friday Agreement was in the rear-view mirror, as were much of the struggles of the previous decades. It was almost like people were sick and tired of caring about trauma.

    Our film shows us the trials and tribulations of Aine just looking to navigate the world of a teenage girl. There are plenty of familiar faces in this cast with Jaime Winstone and Julian Glover, but nobody really outshines the leads Niamh James and Todd Bell. The film is paced in a manner that lets us know about the characters. The most memorable scenes in the film are more painful than funny with Aine's Nightmares.

    Danny Patrick's films the action is from a completely neutral vantage point. There is nothing at all pretentious or preachy about any of the subject matter. The film ramps up the humor of other Teen fare, but shadows that with the tragic desperation that modern teenagers face, this film is worth taking a look at.

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    • Trivia
      Danny Patrick: [Robocop] There are multiple conversations and references to the original Paul Verhoeven RoboCop (1987) - including Jerome Jackson quoting "The Tigers are playing tonight, I never miss a game", the same reference Clarence Boddicker Kurtwood Smith says.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 15, 2024 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Production companies
      • Empire Productions
      • Pulcinella Film
      • Trinity Creative Partnership
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

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