Baltimore
- 2023
- 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Amongst the political turmoil of the 1970s, a rebellious English heiress joins the Irish Republican Army and takes part in an armed raid on an estate with three comrades that eventually take... Read allAmongst the political turmoil of the 1970s, a rebellious English heiress joins the Irish Republican Army and takes part in an armed raid on an estate with three comrades that eventually takes a violent turn.Amongst the political turmoil of the 1970s, a rebellious English heiress joins the Irish Republican Army and takes part in an armed raid on an estate with three comrades that eventually takes a violent turn.
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- 1 win & 6 nominations total
Marty Breen
- Sophie
- (as Martha Breen)
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Compelled to be presented to the Queen as a debutante in return for an Oxford University education, Rose Dugdale (Imogen Poots) rebels from a fairly early age. Her privileged upbringing - as so often happens - leads her to detest the very hands that fed her in her childhood. Meantime, the troubles in Northern Ireland in the early 1970s are only increasing and after a trip to a training camp in Cuba, she returns a fully capable, bomb-making, terrorist - with a brain and a conscience. A plot is devised to rob a stately home of some valuable Goya, Rubens and Vermeer paintings and hold them as hostage for £500,000 and the freedom of two hunger striking IRA prisoners incarcerated in the UK. What now ensues is a rather weakly constructed speculation as to just how this shrewd plan was executed and of the aftermath. The story is an interesting history - but with the timelines dancing around all over the place and the performance of Poots a bit hit or miss, I found the pace of the film too bitty. We are all too often left dangling when a storyline is being developed and talking of development, there is very little to inform us about who the real Dugdale was. The screenplay doesn't shy away from describing the radicalisation here nor of some of it's concomitant brutality but somehow her vitriolic detestation of the British state is left completely unexplained. This subject could make for a strong political documentary on a woman who was clearly dedicated to her cause, but as a drama - this doesn't ever really engage.
Rose Dugdale (Imogen Poots) rebels against her upper-crust English upbringing. She turns into a social agitator, social organizer, and finally a revolutionary. She tries to steal from her home for the IRA and her parents get her arrested. It's 1974. She leads three other men on a mission to steal valuable paintings and ransom them for four IRA prisoners.
The caper isn't much. More could be done to make that exciting. This is more about Rose's journey. It's her character study and that relies on Imogen Poots. Luckily, I really like her acting over these many years and she sells me on this character.
The caper isn't much. More could be done to make that exciting. This is more about Rose's journey. It's her character study and that relies on Imogen Poots. Luckily, I really like her acting over these many years and she sells me on this character.
We need more strong female leads in films these days. Women who speak up who stand up and do not do the whole "women should be seen but not heard". I think this film is excellent and well made. Story line is fabulous. I love Imogen Ive seen her in other films she is a force to be reckoned with. Please if you have any doubts hear me out im. I am a very critical movie goer and I wouldn't bother with a review if this wasn't worth it... So give it a chance and watch this true story be shown in its authentic form. Thank you for taking the time to listen to my review. Be well. And focus on the story. It's true.
In '70s-based Irish true-tale "Rose's War" (aka "Baltimore") young English heiress Imogen Poots rebels against parents Carrie Crowley & Simon Coury to lend her active support to the IRA, leading Tom Vaughan-Lawlor (terrific), Lewis Brophy & Jack Meade in violently robbing a haul of valuable paintings from a stately home, before hiding out while trying to extract a ransom & prisoner release for them. Dermot Crowley offers solid support, and experienced co-writers / co-directors Christine Malloy & Joe Lawlor do chop the timeline cleverly - but it still comes across as only a relatively minor jigsaw puzzle piece in a much bigger picture. It is interesting, but not sensational.
A great film dramatising real historical events! Imogen Poots is a genius actress and manages to speak English with a perfect French accent, as well as Aristocratic RP, in addition to some Irish Gaelic! We get great cinematography and production design! The story is told in a nice surreal way in a non-chronological order! One might say, this is a great example of modern day British/Irish nouvelle vague if the term can be applied to contemporary cinema. The film explores important topics and is steeped in left wing politics such as socialism, republicanism and feminism. It is delightful and it has minimal violence compared to most contemporary films, especially dealing with the IRA, which is probably the reason why not many people watched it. Adorable! Thank you, Imogen and the team!
Did you know
- TriviaReleased as 'Rose's War' in US.
- GoofsA fisherman agrees to take Rose in his small open boat from Lough Dan (where she is staying) to Baltimore (to join the others at a safe house). However, Lough Dan is a lake with no connection to the sea, and even if it weren't the 200-mile voyage to Baltimore would be practically impossible in such a vessel.
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- Rose's War
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- Budget
- €2,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $429,678
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
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