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IMDbPro

Oranges and Sunshine

  • 2010
  • R
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
6.1K
YOUR RATING
Emily Watson in Oranges and Sunshine (2010)
Set in 1980s Nottingham, social worker Margaret Humphreys holds the British government accountable for child migration schemes and reunite the children involved -- now adults living mostly in Australia -- with their parents in Britain.
Play trailer2:17
5 Videos
28 Photos
BiographyDramaHistory

Set in 1980s Nottingham, social worker Margaret Humphreys holds the British government accountable for child migration schemes and reunites the children involved -- now adults living mostly ... Read allSet in 1980s Nottingham, social worker Margaret Humphreys holds the British government accountable for child migration schemes and reunites the children involved -- now adults living mostly in Australia -- with their parents in Britain.Set in 1980s Nottingham, social worker Margaret Humphreys holds the British government accountable for child migration schemes and reunites the children involved -- now adults living mostly in Australia -- with their parents in Britain.

  • Director
    • Jim Loach
  • Writers
    • Rona Munro
    • Margaret Humphreys
  • Stars
    • Emily Watson
    • Aisling Loftus
    • Stuart Wolfenden
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    6.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jim Loach
    • Writers
      • Rona Munro
      • Margaret Humphreys
    • Stars
      • Emily Watson
      • Aisling Loftus
      • Stuart Wolfenden
    • 72User reviews
    • 70Critic reviews
    • 60Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 wins & 21 nominations total

    Videos5

    U.S. Version
    Trailer 2:17
    U.S. Version
    Oranges and Sunshine
    Trailer 2:07
    Oranges and Sunshine
    Oranges and Sunshine
    Trailer 2:07
    Oranges and Sunshine
    Oranges And Sunshine: Australia House
    Clip 0:41
    Oranges And Sunshine: Australia House
    Oranges And Sunshine: Beach
    Clip 1:21
    Oranges And Sunshine: Beach
    Oranges And Sunshine: Park, Everyone Has A Mother
    Clip 0:34
    Oranges And Sunshine: Park, Everyone Has A Mother

    Photos27

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    + 24
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    Top cast62

    Edit
    Emily Watson
    Emily Watson
    • Margaret
    Aisling Loftus
    Aisling Loftus
    • Susie
    Stuart Wolfenden
    Stuart Wolfenden
    • Bill
    Lorraine Ashbourne
    Lorraine Ashbourne
    • Nicky
    Federay Holmes
    Federay Holmes
    • Charlotte
    Richard Dillane
    Richard Dillane
    • Merv
    Molly Windsor
    Molly Windsor
    • Rachel
    Harvey Scrimshaw
    Harvey Scrimshaw
    • Ben
    Heath Tammy
    Heath Tammy
    • Susan
    • (as Tammy Wakefield)
    Alastair G. Cumming
    Alastair G. Cumming
    • Australia House Official
    • (as Alistair Cummings)
    Kate Rutter
    Kate Rutter
    • Vera
    Hugo Weaving
    Hugo Weaving
    • Jack
    Marg Downey
    Marg Downey
    • Miss Hutchison
    Geoff Revell
    • Syd
    Chrissie Page
    Chrissie Page
    • Betty
    Tristan Hudson
    • Archivist
    Marie Wheeler-King
    • Rita
    Tanya Myers
    • Joan
    • Director
      • Jim Loach
    • Writers
      • Rona Munro
      • Margaret Humphreys
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews72

    7.16K
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    Featured reviews

    9hitchcockthelegend

    They were promised oranges and sunshine.

    Oranges and Sunshine is directed by Jim Loach and adapted to screenplay by Rona Munro from the book "Empty Cradles", written by Margaret Humphreys. It stars Emily Watson, Hugo Weaving, David Wenham and Richard Dillane. Music is by Lisa Gerrard and cinematography by Denson Baker. The film tells the true story of Margaret Humphreys (Watson), a Nottingham social worker who in 1986 began uncovering the scandal of forced child migration from the UK to various countries of the Commonwealth. Thousands upon thousands of children who were either from poor families or orphaned, were sent to British colonies under a banner of lies. Where instead of the oranges and sunshine they were expecting, they were put to work as hard labour and suffered terrible conditions to live in as well as abuse at the hands of their carers.

    Lost Children Of The Empire.

    It's a story ripe for exploitation, for a bit of shock cinema, the kind that assaults you with horrific images, but Oranges and Sunshine is a rare beast, a true life horror tale that accentuates the outrage by remaining understated and steady in sombre tone. This is expert film making from Loach (son of Ken), letting the story unfold with a naturalism that makes it a deeply moving experience. No histrionic characterisations by the actors, no grandstanding speeches or attempts to paint Margaret Humphreys as an armour plated crusader risking death at every turn. It's cold, yet humane, in its telling, the pain of story etched on the faces of the lost children, now adults searching for identity and a family thread to stitch it together. The emotional uplift of the reunion scenes gladdens the heart, but never once does the film proclaim, like its wonderful protagonist, that what has been lost can be replaced. But identity is comforting, the fragmented pieces of childhoods ruined finally piecing themselves together.

    Who was crucified huh? You tell me that.

    Thankfully the makers resist, rightly, the urge to show flashback scenes of the children suffering. We know just by dialogue exchanges and character reactions, just what pain and misery was bestowed upon these minors. Yet the film is full of powerful scenes that really grip and hold the heart, where quite often they are just quiet conversations, a statement made or a question asked. Or even in silence for one truly potent sequence as Margaret visits Bindoon Boys Town in Western Australia, an imposing, but elegant structure on the outside, but that elegance belies the terrible crimes perpetrated by the cleric elders within. Loach and his team don't need tricks or historical tampering to make their film dramatic and worthy, the story sells itself on both counts.

    Oh, baby, baby, it's a wild world.

    Picture is propelled by a wonderfully restrained performance by Watson. A perfect bit of casting, Watson never screams for our sympathies, she hits the right emotional notes required, but never strains to get there, she plays Margaret as a bastion of decency. She deftly blends stoicism with vulnerability as Margaret juggles the emotional strains of the search with that of the safe haven of her family home that she is away from for long periods. Watson is surrounded by three damn fine male performances. Weaving and Wenham as the "lost boys" underpin the story, they perfectly embody the crushing of the childhood spirit, a two pronged acting show that says so much for the thousands of children who were cruel victims of the child migration schemes. Dillane scores high as Margaret's husband, he perfectly understands the tone of the movie and turns in a respectful and appropriate performance as Margaret's loving crutch.

    It's not all perfect, Margaret is met with some resistance and finds herself in a couple of tricky situations, but the evil nature of the wrong-doers never fully surfaces to give her a formidable foe to respond too. Nor is anyone made accountable for their heinous crimes, something which leaves a frustrating taste in the mouth. However, the point of the movie, the attention brought to the story it's about and the skill with which said story is told, ensures that these are just minor quibbles in one of the best movies of the year. 9/10
    nightingaleron

    Brilliant

    I can only give this a 10/10 due to the fact that i grew up with many of the fairbrigians and the Bindoon and Clontarf boys. I am a 62 year old and still socialise with some of these people. Fairbridge in Western Australia is situated just south of Perth and very close to Pinjarra. Every year they hold a Fairbridge festival that lasts for a whole weekend and hosts lots of activities including top groups and singers. I myself was once committed to a boys institution and met many of these kids that had ran away from Bindoon and other institutions that were abusive to them. Kingsley Fairbridge was not the abusive type and most Fairbrigians do not tell the same story as the Christian brothers torture. This movie portrays the story of Margaret Humphrey and her quest to find these -(now grown ups) to find their real parents. Only a very small portion found relatives. The goof here says that Margaret couldn't have moved to a stone house in Perth. Fremantle was the first landing and the first settlers along with convicts dug out a huge section of one of the hills which was limestone. Limestone was used for the building of almost -ALL the first buildings including the Fremantle prison. Many more houses and buildings in both Fremantle and Perth still stand today. I loved the movie and i believe it is very much close to the truth. A must to see.
    8MrGoodMovie

    Britain's Shame

    Should anyone ever question the value of the film industry then the innocently titled "Oranges and Sunshine" is a film that, on its own, could quite easily justify its existence.

    Whilst the acting, production and direction are superb, the film's dark subject matter overshadows all, and its disturbing revelations require no dramatisation. As the psychological damage caused to a whole generation of "stolen" children becomes clear, it is difficult to comprehend the sheer immensity of the systematic betrayal of trust suffered by a staggering number of British families, and perpetrated by those in authority who should have known better.

    "Oranges and Sunshine" covers a mere handful of tragic stories in various ways, all very effective. These stories expose a truly shameful episode in British history, and the way in which those affected adapted to their fate - with varying degrees of success. What is clear though is that for better or worse, this childhood experience has indelibly marked them for the rest of their lives.

    Although the children who were torn away from their mothers may not have been marshalled roughly onto rail wagons, on a one way trip to oblivion, a very clear parallel can be drawn between the ghastly regime in Nazi Germany, and the ghastly regimes that allowed this despicable scheme to continue, and which do not appear, from the facts as depicted in this film, to have been brought to account.

    The parallel is that when good men and women fall silent, and no-one challenges the systemic abuse of power by those in authority, then the arrogant, the incompetent, the weak-willed, the lazy and, indeed, the downright evil, triumph.

    To me that is the enduring message of this brilliant yet incredibly sad film. It is a repeated lesson we seem incapable of learning, no matter how many times emotionally evocative films like this attempt to remind us.
    8julian-mumford

    A quietly angry, lightly fictionalized film

    A quietly angry, lightly fictionalized film detailing the systematic, organized UK government sanctioned deportation of up to 150,000 children, often as young as three to Australia, South Africa, New Zealand and Zimbabwe.

    In case you were under the assumption that this occurred in the dark ages, you would be wrong. The last cases are recorded in the late 1960's and early 1970's.

    Emily Watson plays Margaret Humphreys the tireless Nottinghamshire social worker, who stumbled across an isolated case and then fought almost single-handedly to undercover the truth. Creating the "Child Migrants" trust by necessity to reunite lost families, sometimes decades later and in many cases too late.

    The film is based on the the book "Empty Cradles" written by Humphreys to highlight the plight of the families and children involved and raise much needed funds.

    Not only were children sent to countries alien to them, in the majority of cases without parental consent or even with the parents knowledge, many were told incorrectly their parents had died leaving them as orphans. Brothers and sisters were systematically split up and many endured harsh conditions, being treated as slave labour and subject to both mental and in many cases physical and sexual abuse, often at the hands of those supposedly charged with their care and well being.

    As in many such cases, the Church and charitable organizations, when confronted with the proof of the neglect they oversaw, denied the charges and repeatedly attempted to frustrate attempts to drag the secret into the light.

    Eventually in 2010 the UK Government formally apologised for the migrants treatment, finally acknowledging the mistakes that had been made.

    Bearing in mind the shocking truths on display, does the film need to be any good? Directed by small screen veteran Jim Loach, this is a sympathetic account with quality naturalistic acting from all of the cast, in particular Watson and Hugo Weaving an adult sent as a child to Australia for "Sunshine and Oranges". Humphreys long suffering and supportive husband deserves a medal of some description as his wife continues to travel the world putting wrongs right or at least allowing closure, seemingly with little regard for her own safety, mental or physical health.

    The film resembles "Magdalene Sisters", all the more effective for the lack of moralizing, preaching and sentimentality, apart from one off key line "You got my Mum for Christmas", the dialogue and acting are pitch perfect.

    There are always concerns as to how fictionalized true stories are, certainly the facts are undeniable, all films compress time, alter circumstances and timelines. The most important factor is, does the film capture the spirit and feel, this does just that.

    Summary

    A stirring, largely truthful re-telling of an important story in our recent past, not an easy watch in parts but well worth the time to be aware of this travesty, compounded by the initial failure of anyone brave enough to take responsibility for what had occurred.

    Watson embodies the spirit of Humphreys who quite rightly eventually received recognition for all her efforts.

    Recommended

    http://julesmoviereviews.blogspot.co.nz/
    9scunnered_again

    The acidic truth of Oranges and Sunshine....

    I caught this film as part of the Glasgow Film Festival and I'm glad that I did. Knowing very little of the story about the the organised deportation of children in care from the United Kingdom to Australia, I found much of this film was shocking and upsetting. This film concentrates on Margaret Humphrys, the social worker who uncovers this scandal. Under her own steam and then with the support of her employer, Margaret discovers that more than just a few children were deported. She makes it her mission to help those deportees who wish to find out about the families they were forced to leave behind. This proves to be no easy task as the British government stonewall her and provide no help with the details of the deportees or their families. No deliberate attempt is made to overplay the injustice or high emotions running through the story; it is told in a simple, straightforward and affecting manner and it is all the more powerful for that. Take some time out and go and see this film as it's one that deserves a wide audience and stay to the end as that's when the viewer finds out when an apology for this very sad situation was given.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Based on true events, Margaret Humphreys was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia in 1993, and awarded Commander of the British Empire in 2011 for her work.
    • Goofs
      When Margaret is searching through the Public Records of Births and Marriages each entry gives full details, is handwritten, and sorted by town and presented in chronological order. In reality, to protect data they are single-line typed entries giving basics and references for obtaining full details, for anywhere in the country, and sorted alphabetically by surname for each quarter of the year.
    • Quotes

      Orphan: All day, in blazing heat, no rest, no water. I was nine years old, and I was lifting rocks the size of my upper body. And he's yelling at us, "you weak, weak pitiful sons of whores". We built Stations of the Cross, but who was crucified, huh? Tell me that.

    • Connections
      Featured in Breakfast: Episode dated 23 March 2011 (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      Wild World
      Written and performed by Cat Stevens

      Courtesy of Universal-Island Records Ltd

      Courtesy of Universal Music Operations Ltd

      Published by EMI Music Publishing Ltd

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 1, 2011 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Australia
    • Official sites
      • BBC Films (United Kingdom)
      • Cohen Media Group
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Oranges & Sunshine
    • Filming locations
      • Adelaide, South Australia, Australia(location)
    • Production companies
      • Screen Australia
      • See-Saw Films
      • Little Gaddesden Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $4,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $143,480
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $18,600
      • Oct 23, 2011
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,017,653
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 45 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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