List of films featuring the Irish Republican Army
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2024) |
This is a list of films in which the Irish Republican Army, a faction thereof or a break away organisation (whether real or fictional) is portrayed either through its plot or by a main character.
Title | Director | Notable cast | Summary | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Juno and the Paycock | Alfred Hitchcock | Maire O'Neill, Edward Chapman, Sidney Morgan, Sara Allgood | A long suffering wife's dismay as her troubled family is unwound by the prospect of wealth. Her husband is useless, her son is pursued by rebels for informing, and her daughter is dangerously in love with a lawyer due an inheritance. She tries to save her family from the storms that follows.[1] Based on the 1924 play by Seán O'Casey.[2] | 1930 | |
The Informer | John Ford | Victor McLaglen | A disgraced former IRA member decides to inform on his former comrade and use the bounty to emigrate. His former comrade is then killed in a gunfight and things spiral as it becomes known it was he who informed.[3] Based on the novel by Liam O'Flaherty.[4] | 1935 | |
Beloved Enemy | H.C. Potter | Merle Oberon, Brian Aherne, David Niven | During the Irish War of Independence an Irish rebel leader and a British aristocratic woman fall in love. The rebel however is pursued by a British Army officer.[5] | 1936 | |
My Life for Ireland | Max W. Kimmich | Anna Dammann, René Deltgen | A Nazi propaganda film where a young student who sells out his love interest to the Secret Service after seeing her with a wanted Irish revolutionary, must risk his life to rehabilitate himself.[6] | 1941 | |
I See a Dark Stranger | Frank Launder | Deborah Kerr, Trevor Howard | A young Irish woman becomes a Nazi spy.[7] | 1946 | |
Odd Man Out | Carol Reed | James Mason | A wounded Irish nationalist leader in Belfast attempts to evade police following a failed robbery.[8] (The group he belongs to is not named, but the IRA were the only Irish republican group active at the time.) | 1947 | |
The Quiet Man | John Ford | John Wayne | A retired boxer returns home to Ireland. He falls for a fiery red-headed, whose brother forms a rivalry with him.[9][10] | 1952 | |
The Gentle Gunman | Basil Dearden | John Mills, Dirk Bogarde | IRA Volunteer Terry Sullivan (Mills) become disillusioned with a bombing campaign of London during the Second World War.[11] | 1952 | |
Shake Hands with the Devil | Michael Anderson | James Cagney, Don Murray, Dana Wynter, Glynis Johns | A young American gets involved in the 1921 battles between the Black and Tans and the IRA, - but at last he becomes sick of all the killing and puts an end to it by shooting an IRA-leader.[12] | 1959 | |
A Terrible Beauty (also known as The Night Fighters) | Tay Garnett | Robert Mitchum | The Night Fighters is a look at the conflicted loyalties that trouble a daring young IRA recruit who comes to realize that some of his IRA cohorts are seriously misguided, and that the Nazis aren't to be trusted as allies.[13] Based on the 1958 A Terrible Beauty novel by Arthur Roth.[14] | 1960 | |
Ryan's Daughter | David Lean | Sarah Miles, Robert Mitchum, John Mills, Leo McKern, Trevor Howard | IRA men arrive in a village to prepare to receive a delivery of German rifles from a ship offshore. Although the villagers help them recover the weapons during a storm, they are captured by the local British Army detachment on leaving the beach.[15] | 1970 | |
Duck, You Sucker! | Sergio Leone | James Coburn, Rod Steiger | An Irish explosives expert on the run and a Mexican bandit unintentionally get involved in the Mexican Revolution.[16] | 1971 | |
A Sense of Loss | Marcel Ophüls | Documentary shot over six weeks in December 1971, and January 1972, the film consisted of interviews with Protestants, Catholics, politicians, and some soldiers, combined with TV news clips of bombings and violence.[17][18] | 1972 | ||
NO GO! | Richard Chase | Docudrama about both the Provisional IRA and Official IRA in Derry's Bogside.[19][20] | 1973 | ||
Hennessy | Don Sharp | Rod Steiger, Lee Remick | After his family is killed, a once peaceful Irishman plots revenge, setting out to destroy the British Parliament.[21] | 1975 | |
The Eagle Has Landed | John Sturges | Michael Caine, Donald Sutherland, Robert Duvall | A former IRA man sheltering in Nazi Germany, where he works as a lecturer, is parachuted into England to make preparations for a Luftwaffe parachute unit, disguised as Polish soldiers, tasked with capturing or killing Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill.[22] | 1976 | |
The Patriot Game | Arthur MacCaig | A history of the Northern Irish conflict from 1968 to 1978, including the origins of the IRA and the conflict itself.[23] | 1979 | documentary | |
The Outsider | Tony Luraschi | Craig Wasson, Sterling Hayden, Patricia Quinn, Niall O'Brien | An Irish-American man travels to Ireland during the 1970s and joins the IRA.[24] Based on the book The Heritage of Michael Flaherty by Colin Leinster. [citation needed] | 1979 | |
The Long Good Friday | John Mackenzie | Bob Hoskins, Helen Mirren | A London crime boss is beset by problems which prove to be caused by the Provisional IRA, targeting his organisation following coincidental events that incorrectly implicate his involvement.[25] | 1980 | |
Guests of the Nation | John J. Desmond | Two British enlistees being held captive by the IRA during the Irish War of Independence form a sense of camaraderie with their IRA guards. Difficulties ensure when they are to be executed.[26] | 1981 | Television film | |
Harry's Game | Lawrence Gordon Clark | Ray Lonnen, Derek Thompson | An IRA rifleman who assassinated a British minister in front of his family in London is tracked down by an undercover British Army officer.[29] Based on Gerald Seymour’s 1975 novel.[30] | 1982 | Television serial |
Giro City (also known by And Nothing But the Truth) | Karl Francis | Glenda Jackson, Jon Finch, Kenneth Colley, Bruce Alexander, Sharon Morgan | Drama about a TV current affairs team who are working on two major news stories, and find themselves coming up against censorship and self-censorship in the media.[31] | 1982 | Television film |
Cal | Pat O'Connor | Helen Mirren, John Lynch, Donal McCann, Ray McAnally, John Kavanagh, Tom Hickey, J. J. Murphy | A young Provisional IRA member wants to leave after falling in love with the widow of a victim.[32] Based on a novella by Bernard MacLaverty.[33] | 1984 | |
The Glory Boys | Michael Ferguson | Anthony Perkins, Rod Steiger, Alfred Burke, Joanna Lumley | The IRA assigns one of its members to aid a PLO assassin in his attempt to kill an Israeli nuclear scientist in London, while British Intelligence officers attempt to prevent and capture them.[34] | 1984 | Television serial |
Contact | Alan Clarke | Sean Chapman | A platoon of British paratroopers on border patrol in South Armagh face a series of tense encounters. Based on A.F.N. Clarke's experiences as a Parachute Regiment officer in 1970s Northern Ireland.[35][36] | 1984 | Television film |
In This Corner | Atom Egoyan | An amateur boxer from Canada becomes an unwitting pawn in The Troubles when he is convinced by Irish Republican Army to help smuggle accused member back into Ireland as part of his entourage.[37] | 1986 | Television film | |
A Prayer for the Dying | Mike Hodges | Mickey Rourke, Bob Hoskins, Alan Bates, Liam Neeson, Leonard Termo, Camille Coduri, Alison Doody | A former IRA member escapes to London and tries to forget his past.[38] | 1987 | |
Naming the Names | Sylvestra Le Touzel | Stuart Burge | Young Belfast woman committed to republican cause caught in web of conflicting loyalties and violence.[39] Based on a short fiction story by Anne Devlin.[40] | 1987 | TV movie |
Act of Betrayal | Lawrence Gordon Clark | Elliott Gould, Patrick Bergin | An IRA informer and his family are given new identities and new lives in Australia but the IRA are still determined to track them down.[41] | 1988 | TV movie |
The Dawning | Robert Knights | Anthony Hopkins, Hugh Grant, Jean Simmons, Trevor Howard, Rebecca Pidgeon | Depiction of the Irish War of Independence through the eyes of the Anglo-Irish landlord class.[42] | 1988 | |
The Grasscutter | Ian Mune | Terence Cooper, Ian McElhinney | An Ulster Volunteer Force informer living under an assumed identity in New Zealand is revealed, with both loyalist and republican groups eager to track him down.[43] | 1988 | |
A Casualty of War | Tom Clegg | Following an American air strike on Libyan leader Colonel Gaddafi's personal residence, the Libyan leader agrees to supply the IRA with weapons in revenge for Britain's involvement. Aware of the plans, MI5 persuade a former SAS man to go undercover and investigate the shipment. It is a dangerous mission especially with all becoming increasingly suspicious of him, who having retired, has become a well-known writer.[44] | 1989 | Television film | |
Elephant | Alan Clarke | A chilling commentary on the sectarian murders which are everyday events there, covering several sectarian murders that happened during the troubles.[45][46] | 1989 | Television film | |
Who Bombed Birmingham? | Mike Beckham | John Hurt, Martin Shaw | Docudrama about the Birmingham Pub Bombings and the subsequent Birmingham Six.[47] | 1991 | Documentary film |
Behind the Mask | Frank Martin | A documentary on the life and attitudes of IRA members. Includes interviews with Brendan Hughes, Martin Meehan, Joe Cahill, Gerry Adams, and Martin McGuinness, as well as some others.[48] | 1991 | Documentary film | |
The Treaty | Jonathan Lewis | Brendan Gleeson, Bosco Hogan, Ian Bannen, Julian Fellowes, Barry McGovern | Depiction of the negotiations for the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty towards the end of the Irish War of Independence, and the aftermath of the treaty leading to the Irish Civil War.[49][50] | 1991 | Television film |
Force of Duty | Pat O'Connor | Adrian Dunbar, Donal McCann, Patrick Malahide | An RUC detective is consumed by guilt after he fails to act decisively in a moment of terror. As the pressure on him builds, he gradually loses control of his life.[51] | 1992 | Television film |
Patriot Games | Phillip Noyce | Harrison Ford | A former CIA analyst witnesses and intervenes in an attempted kidnapping of the British Minister of State for Northern Ireland by a radical IRA splinter group. The group then aims to take revenge on him, while he aims to stop them.[52] Adaptation of the 1987 novel by Tom Clancy.[53] | 1992 | |
The Crying Game | Neil Jordan | Stephen Rea, Miranda Richardson, Forest Whitaker, Jaye Davidson, Adrian Dunbar, Tony Slattery, Jim Broadbent, Ralph Brown, Andrée Bernard | The Provisional IRA unit kidnap a black British soldier after a female member of their unit lures him to a secluded area by promising sex. The unit intends to use him to secure the release of an imprisoned Provisional IRA member. He is executed when the deadline expires. Years later a member of the unit befriends his partner in London.[54] | 1992 | |
Circles of Deceit | Geoffrey Sax | The British Secret Service enlists the help of a former Special Air Service soldier to go undercover and infiltrate the IRA.[55] | 1993 | Television film | |
In the Name of the Father | Jim Sheridan | Daniel Day-Lewis Pete Postlethwaite | Based on the Guildford Four, father and son are falsely imprisoned as IRA members accused of committing the Guildford pub bombing.[56] | 1993 | |
Blown Away | Stephen Hopkins | Jeff Bridges, Tommy Lee Jones | A former IRA bomber escapes from prison and begins a campaign targeting members of the Boston police's bomb squad.[57] | 1994 | |
Patriots | Frank Kerr | An Irish-American girl in Boston, whose grandfather fought the Black and Tans, is persuaded to travel to Ireland to help the IRA. Unbeknownst to her, her recruiter is a double agent for the British Army.[58] | 1994 | ||
More Than a Sacrifice | Tom Collins | A look at how four republicans adjusted to a post-ceasefire way of life after the 1994 IRA ceasefire.[59] | 1995 | Documentary film | |
The Boys of Barr na Sráide | Conor O'Carroll | [citation needed] | 1996 | Short film | |
Michael Collins | Neil Jordan | Liam Neeson, Aidan Quinn, Stephen Rea, Alan Rickman, Julia Roberts, Brendan Gleeson | Biopic about Irish revolutionary Michael Collins.[60] | 1996 | |
Some Mother's Son | Terry George | Helen Mirren, Fionnula Flanagan | Two mothers are faced with a dilemma when their sons in the IRA take part in the 1981 Hunger Strike.[61] | 1996 | |
The Eliminator | Enda Hughes | Set in the middle of the Troubles, it tells the story of a gang of youths in Armagh known as 'The Organisation' fighting the British secret service for control of a super-vehicle named The Viper, whose plans are in the hands of a republican rebel.[62] | 1996 | ||
The Devil's Own | Alan J. Pakula | Brad Pitt, Harrison Ford | An NYPD officer discovers that an Irish immigrant they housed is an undercover member of the IRA attempting to purchase missiles.[63] | 1997 | |
Midnight Man | Lawrence Gordon Clark | British soldiers force a recently captured IRA member to cooperate with them and to go undercover to prevent an attempt on the life of the U.S. president. But the spy soon realizes that the first plot is but a ruse for a more sinister scheme risking trouble between China and the United Kingdom.[64] | 1997 | Television film | |
A Further Gesture (Also known as The Break) | Robert Dornhelm | Stephen Rea, Alfred Molina, Rosana Pastor, Brendan Gleeson, Jorge Sanz | Following his escape from prison, an IRA member escapes to America. Jaded, he is determined not to take up any fresh causes in America. He then falls in with some Guatemalan exiles who aim to assassinate a member of the CIA. He reluctantly helps the amateur trio so that he and one of the Guatemalans he has fallen for can escape together. This “further gesture” is to have unexpected repercussions for all four.[65] | 1997 | |
The Informant | Jim McBride | A man who escaped the troubles is reluctantly pulled out of retirement in the Republic of Ireland by the IRAwho bring him back to Belfast to perform one last job due to his skill with an RPG. Initially refusing the job, he realises he has no choice. He is to kill a judge using an RPG. During the getaway he is arrested and becomes a supergrass.[66] | 1997 | ||
The Jackal | Michael Caton-Jones | Bruce Willis, Richard Gere | An ex-IRA gunman is recruited to assist the CIA in tracking down a suspected presidential assassin.[67] | 1997 | |
The Boxer | Jim Sheridan | Daniel Day-Lewis, Emily Watson | A boxer, and former Provisional IRA returns home from a 14-year stint in prison at the age of 32. Weary of the unbroken cycle of violence in Northern Ireland, he attempts to settle down and live in peace. He starts up a non-sectarian boxing club for boys in an old gymnasium.[68] | 1997 | |
The General | John Boorman | Brendan Gleeson | Details the life of Dublin underworld figure Martin Cahill.[69] | 1998 | |
Titanic Town | Roger Michell | A mother and her family move during the height of the troubles into a housing estate in Catholic West Belfast. Violent conflict exists side-by-side with normal civilian life. But when an old friend is killed in the crossfire, it leads the mother to a meeting of a women's peace group.[70] Based on the 1993 autobiography by Mary Costello.[71] | 1998 | ||
Divorcing Jack | David Caffrey | David Thewlis, Rachel Griffiths, Jason Isaacs, Richard Gant, Robert Lindsay | A Northern Irish reporter gets entangled in a web of political intrigue and sectarian violence, at the same time as Northern Ireland is set to elect a new Prime Minister.[72] Adaptation of the 1995 book by Colin Bateman.[73] | 1998 | |
Ronin | John Frankenheimer | Robert De Niro | IRA operatives hire mercenaries to retrieve a mysterious briefcase.[74] | 1998 | |
The Craic | Ted Emery | Two best friends flee from Belfast and illegally enter Australia after a violent confrontation with the IRA.[75] | 1999 | ||
Exiled | Bill Muir | An Irishman emigrates to New York to escape the tensions of Northern Ireland in 1991. However, this does not free him from strife, soon finding himself in the middle of a gun-running operation involving his cousin and two hot-headed friends.[76] | 1999 | ||
Brits | Peter Taylor | Depiction of the covert war in Northern Ireland including interviews of former members of 14 Intelligence Company, the RUC Headquarters Mobile Support Unit and MI6.[77] | 2000 | Documentary television series | |
Borstal Boy | Peter Sheridan | Shawn Hatosy, Danny Dyer, Michael York, Eva Birthistle, Ian McElhinney, Ronnie Drew | A young Behan, is jailed during an IRA bombing mission in Liverpool. He loses his naïveté over the three years of his sentence to a juvenile borstal, softening his radical Irish republican stance and warming to his British fellow prisoners.[78] Based on the 1958 autobiography by Brendan Behan.[79] | 2000 | |
An Everlasting Piece | Barry Levinson | Barry McEvoy, Brían F. O'Byrne, Anna Friel, Pauline McLynn, Laurence Kinlan, Billy Connolly, Enda Oates | Two wig salesmen, one Catholic and one Protestant, live in war-torn Belfast, Northern Ireland in the mid-1980s and embark on their plan to get rich through selling hair pieces. Their business ends up involved with the troubles.[80] | 2000 | |
The Bombmaker | Graham Theakston | Dervla Kirwan, Mark Womack, David Hunt, Francis Magee, Samantha Bond, Angeline Ball, Keith Duffy, Scott Maslen | A former IRA bombmaker is forced to come out of retirement when her daughter is kidnapped and held to ransom.[81] Based on the novel by Stephen Leather.[82] | 2001 | Television film |
Shamrock and Swastika | Brendan Culleton, Irina Maldea | Examination of the Irish Republican Army's collaboration with the Abwehr during World War II.[83] | 2001 | Television documentary | |
H3 | Les Blair | Dean Lennox Kelly, Mark O'Halloran, | Depiction of the 1981 Irish hunger strike.[84] | 2001 | |
Bloody Sunday | Paul Greengrass | James Nesbit, Tim Pigott-Smith, Nicholas Farrell, Gerard McSorley | Depiction of the 1972 Bloody Sunday massacre.[85] | 2002 | Television film |
Sunday | Charles McDougall | Ciarán McMenamin, Christopher Eccleston | Depiction of the 1972 Bloody Sunday massacre.[86] | 2002 | Television film |
The Rising of the Moon | Deborah Baxtrom | IRA member Bobby Sands is visited by his mother while imprisoned in Northern Ireland.[citation needed] | 2002 | ||
Boxed | Marion Comer | Tom Murphy | A priest is called upon to provide last rites to an IRA prisoner.[87] | 2002 | Drama |
The Maze | A history of the notorious HMP Maze and its role in the troubles.[88] | 2002 | Television documentary | ||
Omagh | Pete Travis | Depiction of the 1998 Omagh Bombing by the Real IRA.[89] | 2004 | Television film | |
Breakfast on Pluto | Neil Jordan | Cillian Murphy, Liam Neeson, Stephen Rea | A transgender woman foundling searching for love and her long-lost mother in small town Ireland and London in the 1970s.[90] | 2005 | |
The Year London Blew Up | Edmund Coulthard | Dramadoc about the 1974-75 Provisional IRA campaign in London, which culminated in the Balcombe Street siege.[91] | 2005 | Television film | |
Johnny Was | Mark Hammond | Patrick Bergin, Samantha Mumba, Lennox Lewis, Roger Daltrey, Eriq La Salle | A Provisional IRA volunteer from Ireland escapes his violent past to lie low in London. This changes when his former mentor breaks out of Brixton Prison with members of a dissident republican group hellbent on derailing the Irish peace process.[92] | 2006 | |
The Wind That Shakes the Barley | Ken Loach | Cillian Murphy, Liam Cunningham, Pádraic Delaney, Orla Fitzgerald | Two brothers join the IRA in the Irish War of Independence after seeing a friend killed by the Black and Tans. However tensions rise when they are on opposing sides in the Irish Civil War that follows.[93][94] | 2006 | |
I.R.A. King of Nothing | Damian Chapa | A disgruntled IRA member becomes Ireland's biggest threat to the peace process.[95] | 2006 | ||
Fifty Dead Men Walking | Kari Skogland | Ben Kingsley, Rose McGowan, Jim Sturgess | A loose adaptation of Martin McGartland's 1997 autobiography of the same name.[96][97] | 2008 | |
Hunger | Steve McQueen | Michael Fassbender, Liam Cunningham | Depiction of the Bobby Sands during the 1981 Irish hunger strike.[98] | 2008 | |
Five Minutes of Heaven | Oliver Hirschbiegel | Liam Neeson, James Nesbitt | Depiction of a historical killing in 1975 during the troubles, and a reconciliation attempt after 33 years.[99] | 2009 | |
Voices From The Grave | Kate O'Callaghan | The story of the Northern Ireland Troubles through the Provisional IRA's Brendan Hughes and the UVF's David Ervine, two men who played key roles on opposite sides of the ongoing conflict.[100] Based on the book Voices from the Grave: Two Men's War in Ireland by Ed Maloney.[101] | 2010 | Documentary | |
Shadow Dancer | James Marsh | Andrea Riseborough, Clive Owen, Gillian Anderson, Domhnall Gleeson | Following a failed bombing an IRA member is turned into an informer for MI5 to avoid imprisonment and protect her son.[102] Based on the 1998 novel by Tom Bradby.[103] | 2012 | |
'71 | Yann Demange | Jack O'Connell | A young British soldier is accidentally abandoned, following a riot in Belfast, in 1971.[104] | 2014 | |
The Journey | Nick Hamm | Timothy Spall, Colm Meaney, Freddie Highmore | A fictional account of the true story of how political enemies Ian Paisley and Martin McGuinness formed an unlikely political alliance.[105] | 2016 | |
Rebellion | Colin Teevan | Charlie Murphy, Ruth Bradley, Sarah Greene, Brian Gleeson, Niamh Cusack, Michelle Fairley, Ian McElhinney, Barry Ward, Laurence O'Fuarain, Perdita Weeks | A five part serial drama about the birth of modern Ireland. The story is told from the perspectives of a group of fictional characters who live through the political events of the 1916 Easter Rising.[106] | 2016 | |
The Foreigner | Martin Campbell | Jackie Chan, Pierce Brosnan | A man seeks revenge for the death of his daughter, killed by a bombing committed by a rogue faction of the IRA.[107] | 2017 | |
Maze | Stephen Burke | Tom Vaughan-Lawlor | Prison film about the IRA Maze prison escape of 38 Provisional Irish Republican Army prisoners.[108] | 2017 | |
Resistance | Colin Teevan | Brian Gleeson, Simone Kirby, Natasha O'Keeffe, Gavin Drea | Set in late 1920, Resistance is a sequel series to the 2016 miniseries Rebellion.[109] | 2019 | |
Spotlight on the Troubles: A Secret History | Peter Johnston | A special from Spotlight delving into the role of British Intelligence's "dirty war" and collusion during the troubles.[110] | 2019 | documentary | |
Baltimore | Christine Molloy Joe Lawlor | Imogen Poots | Biopic of heiress-turned-IRA member Rose Dugdale.[111] | 2023 | |
Dead Shot | Tom Guard & Charles Guard | Aml Ameen, Colin Morgan, Tom Vaughan-Lawlor, Sophia Brown, Máiréad Tyers, Mark Strong and Felicity Jones. | A retired Irish paramilitary witnesses the shooting of his pregnant wife by a British soldier and escapes, wounded and presumed dead, to 1970s London to plot his revenge. | 2023 | |
The Secret Army | Darragh MacIntyre & Chris Thornton | Documentary by Darragh MacIntyre & Chris Thornton investigating the lost 1972 film 'The Secret Army' by John Bowyer Bell and Zwy Aldouby. It showed segments from the lost film, including some unseen footage of Provisional IRA operations and training. It also included interviews with Des Long, Tony Devine, Jacob Stern, and Tim Pat Coogan.[112][113] | 2024 | Television documentary |
References
[edit]- ^ Hagopian, Kevin Jack. "Film Notes -Juno and the Paycock". albany.edu. New York State Writers Institute. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
JUNO AND THE PAYCOCK is the story of the long suffering "Juno Boyle's" (Sara Allgood) sudden good fortune at her family's impending inheritance, and her dismay as her troubled family is slowly unwound by the prospect of great wealth. Juno's boastful, spendthrift husband, "Paycock" (Edward Chapman) and his drinking buddy "Joxer Daly" (Sidney Morgan) bedevil her with their noisome, selfish ways. Her son "Johnny," having informed on a fellow IRA man, is pursued by a merciless rebel court, and her daughter "Mary," is dangerously in love with the lawyer who brings the news about the windfall. Through the storms the money brings, the battered, grieving Juno must remain the family's rudder.
- ^ "PlayographyIreland - Juno and the Paycock". .irishplayography.com. Archived from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "AFI|Catalog - The Informer". American Film Institute. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
In 1922, in the strife-torn streets of Dublin, Gypo Nolan, a poor, lumbering goliath, sees a "wanted for murder" poster of his best friend, rebel Frankie McPhillip, that promises a twenty-pound reward for information leading to Frankie's arrest. Although broke and hungry, Gypo suppresses his interest in the poster, until his girl friend, prostitute Katie Madden, berates him in frustration for their poverty. Spurred on by Katie's longing for passage to America, Gypo enters the headquarters of the British army and reveals that Frankie, whom he has just seen, is at Frankie's mother's house. After Frankie is killed in front of his mother and sister Mary, Gypo collects his reward money and finds his way to a pub. There, he explains to Katie that he acquired his newfound wealth by robbing a drunken American sailor. Gypo then shows up at Frankie's wake, where his edgy, defensive behavior and collection of coins arouse suspicion in some members of the Irish rebel army, which had ousted him earlier for failing to carry out an execution. To test their suspicions, the rebels take Gypo to see Dan Gallagher, the commandant of the underground army, who tells Gypo that if he reveals the name of the informant, he will be reinstated in the group. Eager to prove himself, Gypo blurts out the name of tailor Pat Mulligan and then invents a revenge motive for him. Dan, who is anxious to rout out the traitor, agrees to investigate Gypo's accusations at a meeting to be held later that night. Before the meeting, a now drunken Gypo is befriended by Terry, an opportunistic conman, who encourages him to spend his £20 buying food and drink for strangers. Dan, meanwhile, questions Mary about Frankie's fatal visit, and she reveals that Frankie had mentioned seeing Gypo just before coming home. Armed with this information, the rebels find a reeling, nearly broke Gypo in an "after hours" club and escort him to the meeting. After questioning a befuddled Mulligan, the rebels turn on Gypo, who finally admits his deed. Unmoved by Gypo's protests that he didn't know what he was doing, the rebels lock him up and draw straws for his execution. Desperate, Gypo breaks out of his cell and runs to Katie, who hears his tearful confession of betrayal. Filled with her own guilt, Katie goes to Dan and begs for Gypo's life, but discloses his whereabouts in the process. While sleeping in front of Katie's fireplace, Gypo is besieged by the vengeful rebels and shot. The wounded Gypo staggers to a nearby church and makes a dying confession to Frankie's grieving mother. As Gypo collapses for the last time at the foot of the altar, Frankie's mother forgives him.
- ^ O'Flaherty, Liam (1925). The Informer. London: Jonathan Cape.
- ^ "Lux Radio Theater 1937 - Beloved Enemy". archive.org. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "Mein Leben für Irland | Film 1941 | Moviepilot". moviepilot.de (in German). Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Dublin 1921: Michael O'Brien, der Sohn eines aufständischen Iren, wird wie viele irische Altersgenossen auf ein Internat geschickt, wo er gemeinsam mit englischen Schülern lernen und so zu einem Engländer erzogen werden soll. Zu der Gruppe um den achtzehnjährigen Michael stößt eines Tages der neue Schüler Patrick, ein in Amerika aufgewachsener Ire. Sie freunden sich an. Bei einem Besuch bei Michaels Mutter entflammt Patrick in schwärmerischer Liebe zu ihr. Nachts schleicht er aus dem Schlafsaal, um zu ihr zu gelangen - und sieht sie mit einem anderen Mann. Gekränkt vertraut er sich einem englischen Mitschüler an. Der erkennt aus Patricks Schilderung in dem Mann den gesuchten irischen Freiheitskämpfer und Revolutionsführer Robert Devoy. Er macht den Geheimdienst darauf aufmerksam - sein Onkel ist Offizier des Secret Service. Sie wird verhaftet, Devoy konnte rechtzeitig fliehen. Michael aber, Anführer eines Geheimbundes der irischen Schüler, die den anstehenden Aufstand gegen die Engländer unterstützen wollen, gerät darüber in großen Streit mit Patrick, der mit seiner Schwärmerei und seinem Geständnis gegenüber dem Mitschüler den Geheimdienst erst auf die Fährte der Mutter gebracht hatte. Um seine Schuld zu sühnen, nimmt Patrick Kontakt zu Devoy auf, der ihm einen ausgefeilten Plan vorlegt, wie man den Engländern einen schweren Schlag versetzen könnte. Patrick soll als Doppelagent fungieren, scheinbar für die Engländer als Spitzel arbeiten, tatsächlich aber für die Sache der Revolution kämpfen. Doch Michael und die anderen irischen Mitschüler sehen in ihm einen Verräter, und als der Aufstand aufbricht, muss Patrick sein Leben riskieren, um sich zu rehabilitieren.
[Dublin 1921: Michael O'Brien, the son of a rebellious Irishman, is, like many Irish contemporaries, sent to a boarding school where he is supposed to study alongside English students and thus be raised to be an Englishman. One day, the group around eighteen-year-old Michael is joined by new student Patrick, an Irishman who grew up in America. They become friends. During a visit to Michael's mother, Patrick falls in love with her. At night he sneaks out of the dormitory to get to her - and sees her with another man. Offended, he confides in an English classmate. From Patrick's description he recognizes the man as the wanted Irish freedom fighter and revolutionary leader Robert Devoy. He brings this to the attention of the Secret Service - his uncle is a Secret Service officer. She is arrested, Devoy was able to escape in time. But Michael, leader of a secret society of Irish students who want to support the upcoming uprising against the English, gets into a big argument with Patrick, who was the first to put the secret service on the mother's trail with his crush and his confession to his fellow student. To atone for his guilt, Patrick contacts Devoy, who presents him with an elaborate plan to deal a serious blow to the English. Patrick is supposed to act as a double agent, apparently working as an informant for the English, but actually fighting for the cause of the revolution. But Michael and the other Irish classmates see him as a traitor, and when the uprising breaks out, Patrick has to risk his life to rehabilitate himself.] - ^ "I See A Dark Stranger (1946) - Overview - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies. 18 August 2016. Archived from the original on 18 August 2016. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Determined, independent Bridie Quilty comes of age in 1944 Ireland thinking all Englishmen are devils. Her desire to join the IRA meets no encouragement, but a German spy finds her easy to recruit. We next find her working in a pub near a British military prison, using her sex appeal in the service of the enemy. But chance puts a really vital secret into her hands, leading to a chase involving Bridie, a British officer who has fallen for her, a German agent unknown to them both, and the police...paralleled by Bridie's own internal conflicts.
- ^ Crowther, Bosley (24 April 1947). "Odd Man Out (1947) ' Odd Man Out,' British Film in Which James Mason Again Is the Chief Menace, Has Its Premiere at Loew's Criterion". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 16 June 2015. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "AFI|Catalog - The Quiet Man". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "The quiet man and the big fellow". The Irish Times. 8 December 2001. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
The Quiet Man is set in the immediate aftermath of the Treaty and, in one exchange, a character (an ex-IRA commander) reminds Michaeleen Oge (Barry Fitzgerald) "that we're at peace now". "True," answers Michaeleen Oge, "but I haven't given up hope."
- ^ "BFI Screenonline: Gentle Gunman, The (1952)". www.screenonline.org.uk. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
The relationship between brothers Terry and Matt, both active in the IRA, comes under strain when Terry begins to question the use of violence.
- ^ "Collections Search | BFI | British Film Institute". British Film Institute. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Period drama. A young American gets involved in the 1921 battles between the Black and Tans and the IRA, - but at last he becomes sick of all the killing and puts an end to it by shooting an IRA-leader. (Synopsis)
- ^ "The Night Fighters". Turner Classic Movies. 29 July 2018. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
The Night Fighters is a look at the conflicted loyalties that trouble the daring young IRA recruit Dermot O'Neill (Robert Mitchum) who comes to realize that some of his IRA cohorts are seriously misguided, and that the Nazis aren't to be trusted as allies.
- ^ Roth, Arthur J. (1958). A Terrible Beauty. London: Hutchinson. ISBN 9781472122148.
- ^ "Ryan's Daughter (1970) | BFI". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 7 April 2016. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
In 1916 in Kirrary, a poor Irish village, Rosy Ryan, daughter of the local publican, is a high-spirited but dreamy girl who mistakes the diffident, widowed village schoolmaster for a man of distinction and, on marrying him, finds disillusionment. The fulfilment of her dreams then arrives, or so she believes, in the form of war-shattered British officer Major Doryan. Meanwhile, a German shipment of guns is being awaited by Irish nationalists, led by the ruthless Red Tim, with which guns they plan to fight the British. Rosy's attachment to the major, known throughout the village, puts her in danger when someone betrays Red Tim
- ^ "Duck, You Sucker!". Film at Lincoln Center. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
The struggles of the '70s are transposed to the front lines of the Mexican Revolution in Sergio Leone's last Zapato western. James Coburn is an IRA dynamite expert on the lam who teams up with a Mexican bandit (Rod Steiger); together they become accidental revolutionaries when they case a bank that's been transformed into a political prison by the Mexican government.
- ^ "OUR BATTLE OF IMAGES: A SENSE OF LOSS". Irish Film Institute. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
However, whereas the talking-head format is typically used as a way of filling out a linear narrative line, German-born documentarian Marcel Ophuls's exhaustive approach seems genuinely investigative. Ophuls would begin with a bombing or shooting, question everyone involved, and gradually draw out the historical and ideological causes. Over 40 interviews feature, with everyone from victims' families and internees, to Bernadette Devlin and Ian Paisley. Each speaks at length, but is also challenged thoroughly, with Ophuls often presenting someone with opposing views from another interview and intercutting the results.
- ^ A Sense of Loss (1972) (dir. Marcel Ophuls), retrieved 22 March 2024 – via YouTube
- ^ "No Go! (1973) - The AV Club". The A.V. Club. 9 January 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Docudrama about IRA in Derry's Bogside/Creegan areas - begins with British setting up of Northern Ireland in the 1920s "which made niggers out of the Catholic minority" there; mentions the split of the IRA into the Provisional ("Provo") faction, which called for conventional uprising to gain independence, and the Official faction, which was strongly Marxist.
- ^ No Go! (1973), retrieved 22 March 2024 – via YouTube
- ^ "BFI | Film & TV Database | HENNESSY (1975)". British Film Institute. 13 January 2009. Archived from the original on 13 January 2009. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
During a street riot in Belfast, the wife and daughter of Hennessy are accidentally killed by a British soldier. Normally opposed to violence, Hennessy decides to destroy the British Parliament during the State Opening the following week.
- ^ Canby, Vincent (26 March 1977). "'Eagle Has Landed' on Screens With Lively Splash of Adventure". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ Maslin, Janet (20 June 1981). "'THE PATRIOT GAME'". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Much of Mr. MacCaig's footage looks like newsreel material. It isn't. Closely studying the events in Northern Ireland during the last 10 years, Mr. MacCaig clandestinely filmed some remarkable street scenes. A man is seen struggling wildly to resist arrest; a group of women assault a British soldier; some children use a demolished truck as a plaything. There is even footage of the bombing of a car and the terrified reactions of people nearby. Mr. MacCaig's own footage is hard to distinguish from the newsreels he also uses, which is one measure of its power and veracity. The calm and intelligent narration also helps unify the film's various ingredients. There is a history lesson here, as the narrator traces the politics of Northern Ireland back for centuries. As the progression of events is coolly and patiently discussed, the film touches on momentous milestones and subtler ones as well. The birth of the I.R.A. is explained. And so is the point at which no-warning bombings of public places replaced the more humane kind. More humane bombings? Can there be such a thing? Mr. MacCaig's film, by dissecting the situation so coolly, helps emphasize the anguish, the bitterness and the confusion.
- ^ Borders, William (9 December 1979). "A Harrowing Film About Ireland Today:A Harrowing Film on Ireland". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ Bradshaw, Peter (18 June 2015). "The Long Good Friday review – classic Brit gangster melodrama". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ O'Connor, John J. (9 February 1981). "TV: 'GUESTS OF NATION' AND MISTER LINCOLN". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
The setting is Ireland in 1921. The title, needless to say, is ironic. The immediate guests are two British soldiers being held hostage by Irish insurgents. In the broader context, the guests are the Irish themselves, still seeking to gain control of their own house from the British. Mr. O'Connor's deceptively simple story manages to skewer brilliantly the absurdities and horrors of war. The Irish jailers and the British captives are all decent chaps trapped in a scenario that is beyond their control. Initial suspicions quickly give way to tentative sharings and petty but thoroughly normal squabblings over religion and politics.
- ^ O'Connor, Frank (1931). Guests of the Nation. Macmillan.
- ^ "Guests Of The Nation". RTÉ Archives. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Set during the War of Independence, the story centres on two Irishmen, Bonaparte and Noble, whose job it is to guard two English soldiers, Belcher and Hawkins, who are being held hostage in an isolated Cork farmhouse where an old woman lives. During this period the four get to know each other, and relationships slowly form between the guests and the revolutionaries. When news arrives that four Irishmen have been captured and executed by the British forces stationed locally, Bonaparte and Nobel receive orders to shoot the two hostages. Bonaparte as the narrator recounts this traumatic series of events which changes him fundamentally as a person.
- ^ "Harry's Game - Lawrence Gordon Clark". www.lawrencegordonclark.com. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
Harry's Game is a 1982 Yorkshire Television 3-part mini series about Harry Brown, a British agent sent to infiltrate the IRA in Belfast to find and kill the assassin of a cabinet minister.
- ^ Seymour, Gerald (1975). Harry's Game. New York: Random House. ISBN 9780394499024.
- ^ "BFI | Film & TV Database | GIRO CITY (1982)". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 29 January 2009. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ Hagopian, Kevin Jack. "Film Notes - CAL". albany.edu. New York State Writers Institute. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ MacLaverty, Bernard (1983). Cal. Belfast: Blackstaff Press.
- ^ "The Glory Boys (1984)". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Two ideologically-disparate terrorists (one from the PLO, one from the IRA) meet up in London to assassinate a visiting Israeli nuclear scientist. An alcoholic ex-government agent is brought out of retirement to track them down.
- ^ "Contact | Troubles Archive". www.troublesarchive.com. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
- ^ Alan Clarke (1985), Contact (1985), retrieved 23 March 2024
- ^ Crook, Barbara (31 January 1986). "Subtle drama counts cost of terrorism". Ottawa Citizen.
- ^ Hinson, Hal (11 September 1987). "'A Prayer for the Dying'". The Washington Post. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "CAIN: Lance Pettitt (2000) 'Television drama and the Troubles', from Screening Ireland: Film and television representation". cain.ulster.ac.uk. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
Her Naming the Names (1987) tells of how Finn's (Sylvestra Le Touzel) life is shaped by her experience of the Protestant pogrom of 1969, in which her granny died, and the subsequent arrival of the British troops. The narrative is structured through flashbacks or dream sequences during her interrogation by an RUC officer (Ian McElhinney). She has been arrested for her part in luring Henry Kirk (Michael Malone) to a park where he has been shot by the IRA. Henry, the son of a judge and from a unionist background, was studying Irish history at Oxford, and became sexually involved with Finn after visiting the book shop in which she worked.
- ^ Devlin, Anne (17 November 1986). The Way-Paver. Faber and Faber Limited. ISBN 978-0571145973.
- ^ "Act of Betrayal (1988) - The Screen Guide - Screen Australia". www.screenaustralia.gov.au. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
- ^ "The Dawning 1988,, directed by Robert Knights | Film review". Time Out Worldwide. 10 September 2012. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
This modest period drama, set in the south of Ireland before partition in 1921, successfully avoids most of the pratfalls and preciousness inherent in the genre. Based on Jennifer Johnston's elegant and expressive novel The Old Jest, it mirrors the events of the mounting IRA terrorist campaign in the maturing mind and soul of an 18-year-old girl. The setting is the world of fading grandeur of the old Anglo-Irish ascendancy. Independent-minded Nancy (Pidgeon) lives in a great house presided over by her aunt (Simmons) and wheelchair-ridden ex-General grandfather (Howard, visibly his last role).
- ^ "THE GRASSCUTTER". www.ngataonga.org.nz. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
The film tells the story of Brian Deeds - living a new life in New Zealand after turning 'supergrass' in his native Ireland some years before. His life is turned into turmoil when his estranged wife tells him that his cover has been blown and their young son murdered". - (from Grasscutter press and publicity )
- ^ "A Casualty of War (1989) starring David Threlfall, Shelley Hack, Amanda Burton, Richard Hope, Clarke Peters, Nadim Sawalha, Alan Howard directed by Tom Clegg Movie Review". www.themoviescene.co.uk. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
- ^ "BBC - Northern Ireland - Drama - Productions - Past Productions - Singles 1985 - 1989". BBC. 13 May 2005. Archived from the original on 13 May 2005. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
It is said that for those living in Northern Ireland the 'Troubles' are as easy to ignore as an elephant in your living room. Alan Clarke's drama is a chilling commentary on the sectarian murders which are everyday events there.
- ^ "BFI Screenonline: Elephant (1989)". www.screenonline.org.uk. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
- ^ Ness, Richard R. (2020). Encyclopedia of Journalists on Film. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 219–220. ISBN 9781538103609.
- ^ "Theme Is Human Rights". 8 May 1992.
"BEHIND THE MASK" (1989), directed by Frank Martin and the Activision Irish Project. A documentary on the life and attitudes of Irish Republican Army members, with a discussion with the directors on Sunday.
- ^ "The Treaty - Where to Watch and Stream Online". Entertainment.ie. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
How the Anglo-Irish Treaty between the unrecognised Irish Republic, represented by Michael Collins, and the British government was concluded after high-stakes negotiations in 1921.
- ^ "Brendan Gleeson Is Michael Collins". RTÉ Archives. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
- ^ "| The Irish Film & Television Network". www.iftn.ie. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
RUC detective Simpson GABBY is consumed by guilt after he fails to act decisively in a moment of terror. As the pressure on him builds, Gabby gradually loses control of his life.
- ^ McBride, Joseph (3 June 1992). "Patriot Games". Variety. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
- ^ Clancy, Tom (1987). Patriot Games. Penguin Publishing Group. ISBN 9780399132414.
- ^ Dwyer, Michael (9 August 2018). "Tears for fears: The Crying Game review (1992)". The Irish Times. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
- ^ "BFI | Film & TV Database | CIRCLE OF DECEIT (1993)". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 29 January 2009. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
TV Film. An ex-SAS operative is called back by his superiors to infiltrate the IRA.
- ^ "In the Name of the Father". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
An Irish man's coerced confession to an I.R.A. bombing he did not commit results in the imprisonment of his father as well. Meanwhile, a British lawyer fights to clear their names and free them.
- ^ "Blown Away (1994)". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
An Irish bomber escapes from prison and targets a member of the Boston bomb squad.
- ^ Moynihan, Sinéad (2019). "'Quiet Men': Film and Filmmaking in Returned Yank Fictions of the Troubles". Ireland, Migration and Return Migration: The ‘Returned Yank’ in the Cultural Imagination, 1952 to present. Liverpool University Press. pp. 43–84. ISBN 9781786949707.
- ^ Flynn, Roddy; Tracy, Tony (2019). Historical Dictionary of Irish Cinema. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781538119587.
More Than a Sacrifice (1995) looked at how four Republicans adjusted to a post-ceasefire way of life...
- ^ Muir, Kate (22 March 2024). "Classic film: Michael Collins (1996)". ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Despite some mild deviations from historical fact and a reliance on cheap period scenery, this movie has heart, beating at speed as Collins, the guerrilla leader of the Irish Republicans fighting for independence, remains constantly on the run from the police and English soldiers.
- ^ "Festival de Cannes - From 15 to 26 may 2013". Cannes Festival. Archived from the original on 6 October 2012. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Would you agree to let your son die if he went on a hunger strike for his beliefs? Would you go against his beliefs and save his life even though it meant the defeat of the cause he was willing to die for. Such is the dilemma facing Kathleen Quigley and Annie Higgins, two Irish mothers during the 1981 hunger strike protest, in Northern Ireland, led by Bobby Sands. The two reluctant companions hold the fate of their grown son - and the fate of the cause their son are willing to die for - in their hands. They journey through war-torn streets of Northern Ireland to the corridors of power in London, as they battle to save the lives of Sands and his fellow hunger strikers. And as the clock ticks away on their children's lives, they prepare to face the parent's nightmare, whether to let their sons live or die.
- ^ "Irish Cult Movie Classics: The Eliminator". RTÉ. 23 December 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
- ^ Travis, Emlyn (2 June 2023). "Harrison Ford accepts blame for Brad Pitt tension on 'Devil's Own' set". EW.com. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
In the film, Ford stars as NYPD Sergeant Tom O'Meara, whose family takes in an Irish construction worker named Rory Devaney (Pitt) only to discover that Devaney is an undercover IRA terrorist attempting to purchase a cargo of missiles.
- ^ "Midnight Man - Where to Watch and Stream Online". Entertainment.ie. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
British soldiers force a recently captured IRA terrorist to cooperate with them and then assign him to go undercover with a gang of terrorists and prevent them from killing the U.S. President. But the spy isn't in long before he realizes that the first plot is but a ruse for a more sinister scheme that could result in trouble between China and Great Britain. - Written by Ørnås
- ^ Elley, Derek (1 June 1997). "A Further Gesture". Variety. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
- ^ Stratton, David (28 September 1997). "The Informant". Variety. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
- ^ Smith, Russell (14 November 1997). "Movie Review: The Jackal". www.austinchronicle.com. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
Planet Hollywood co-owner Willis, looking every bit the fat and prosperous restaurateur, is the title character, a sort Demi-god (as it were) among hit men. Hired by a Russian-based gangster to kill the FBI director, he is pursued by an American G-man (Poitier), a Russian military policewoman (Venora), and the good guys' secret weapon, an Irish Republican Army sniper (Gere), who is giving them the benefit of his terrorist savvy in exchange for a chance to get out of prison.
- ^ Porzio, Stephen (31 December 2022). "25 years ago, an underrated Irish sports drama arrived in cinemas". JOE.ie. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
- ^ Chute, David (20 December 1998). "The Don of Dublin". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
The movie's title character, Martin Cahill (played by Brendan Gleeson), was Dublin's most notorious criminal mastermind of the 1980s. A brilliant tactician and a meticulous planner (hence his military nickname) who pulled off some of the richest and most elaborate jewel robberies and art thefts the city had even seen. But Cahill (the Irish say "Cah-hill," not "Cay-hill") was also a brutal gang boss from one of the city's toughest neighborhoods, infamous for inflicting brutal punishments upon anyone who crossed him. He was also a bit of a folk hero, an anarchic free spirit who enjoyed tweaking authority figures of all sorts, from the Garda (the Irish national police force) to the self-righteous vigilantes of the Irish Republican Army. It was an IRA hit man who put an end to Cahill's tumultuous career in August 1994.
- ^ Rooney, David (8 June 1998). "Titanic Town". Variety. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
- ^ Costello, Mary (2000) [1993]. Titanic Town. Methuen Publishing Ltd. ISBN 9780413772107.
- ^ "Divorcing Jack". Time Out Worldwide. 10 September 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
- ^ Bateman, Colin (1996) [1995]. Divorcing Jack. Arcade Publishing. ISBN 9781559703598.
- ^ O'Sullivan, Michael (25 September 1998). "'Ronin' (R)". The Washington Post. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "Craic, The | Reviews, Trailers, News, Interviews, Discussion | SBS Film". SBS. 5 June 2011. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ Power, Paul (6 September 1999). "Exiled". Variety. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "BBC News | UK | Britain's 'secret war'". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "Borstal Boy". Irish Film Institute. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Brendan Behan, as a sixteen year old Irish republican, sets off on a bombing mission from Ireland to Liverpool during the Second World War. His mission is thwarted when he is apprehended, charged and imprisoned in Borstal, a reform institution for young offenders in East Anglia in England. Forced to live face to face with those he perceived as the enemy, a confrontation reveals a deep inner conflict in the young Brendan and forces a self-examination that is both traumatic and revealing.
- ^ Behan, Brendan (1958). Borstal Boy. Hutchinson. OCLC 185635608.
- ^ "Producer vows appeal after judge tosses lawsuit". Irish Echo. 16 February 2011. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
The comedy pitted two wig salesmen against the IRA, the RUC, and the British Army, in turbulent 1980s Belfast. The duo, one Catholic and the other Protestant, try to sell as many hairpieces as possible throughout the fraught and dangerous city.
- ^ McLean, Gareth (2 April 2001). "Escape from Ballykissangel". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Kirwan isn't daft. In The Bombmaker, she has found a very commercial vehicle. In it, she plays Andrea Hayes, a Dublin wife and mother whose past - as an IRA bombsmith - comes back to haunt her when her daughter is kidnapped. As a ransom, the abductors demand Andrea's services in the creation of a giant bomb which they plan to detonate in the City of London. If Andrea refuses, she will never see her daughter - an impossibly cute munchkin named Katie, complete with blonde ringlets - again. Thus she has to choose between the life of her daughter and the lives of thousands of people who could be caught in the bomb blast. Much handwringing and racing against time ensues.
- ^ Leather, Stephen (1999). The Bombmaker. Hodder Paperbacks. ISBN 9780340689561.
- ^ "Swastika and the Shamrock, The". Irish Film Institute. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "H3". Irish Film Institute. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
Set in the H-Blocks of the Maze prison in the North of Ireland, and co-written by Laurence McKeown who spent 70 days on hunger strike, H3 charts the period up until Bobby Sands' death on 5th May 1981. Through the eyes of fictional characters, the hunger strikers' survival is charted with dignity, comradeship and a sense of humour.
- ^ "French award for Bloody Sunday". 6 October 2002. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
Bloody Sunday, about the killing of 13 civilians in Londonderry by the British army in 1972, won the Hitchcock d'Or best film prize at the Dinard British Film Festival.
- ^ Cozens, Claire (23 September 2002). "C4 Bloody Sunday drama scoops Prix Italia". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Sunday, written by Cracker creator Jimmy McGovern and starring Ciaran McMenamin, Christopher Eccleston and Corin Redgrave, aired earlier this year and was widely praised for its retelling of the story of the massacre on the streets of Derry in 1972. McGovern and his team interviewed soldiers, priests, journalists and politicians to help ensure the drama was accurate, as well as trawling through evidence presented to the original government inquiry under Lord Chief Justice Widgery.
- ^ "British Council Film: Boxed". film-directory.britishcouncil.org. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "The Maze (2002)". The A.V. Club. 22 September 2014. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
The history of the notorious Maze prison and its role in the Northern Ireland conflict.
- ^ Stanford, Peter (8 May 2004). "Day of death". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
We're in Navan, north west of Dublin, on the set of Omagh, a big Channel 4 drama that is guaranteed to provoke controversy when it is aired later this month. On Saturday 15 August 1998, the Real IRA put a 500lb bomb in a car, parked it on Market Street in Omagh, a small town in Northern Ireland, and left it to explode in the middle of the shoppers, killing 29 people from all sides in the community.
- ^ Stein, Ruthe. "Walking on thin gender line in search of love". SFGate. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "The Year London Blew Up: 1974". Blast Films. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Told through documentary, drama and first-hand accounts, this revealing film is a unique account of the most ruthless IRA bombing campaign ever to hit mainland Britain.
- ^ "Johnny Was (2006)". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Johnny Was is a gritty gangster drama set in the tough city of Brixton, London. Johnny (Vinnie Jones) is trying to escape his violent past by living a simple "quiet life".
- ^ "The Wind That Shakes the Barley (2006)". BFI. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
In Ken Loach's acclaimed war drama, Cillian Murphy and Padraic Delaney play brothers who join the Irish Republican Army in 1920 after witnessing the killing of a friend at the hands of the Black and Tans, the British body employed to suppress revolution in Ireland. As the conflict gets increasingly violent and friends and family are tortured and murdered, the brothers become ideologically divided, with tragic results.
- ^ "The Wind That Shakes The Barley - Screen Ireland". www.screenireland.ie. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Ireland 1919: Damian and Teddy are brothers fighting in a guerrilla war for Irish independence from the British, where the Irish workers unite to ambush the notorious Black and Tan squads. Through his military experience Damian, a trained doctor, becomes politicised. When a treaty giving an apparent level of victory to the fighters is signed between the British and Irish in 1921, the brothers find themselves pitted against each other. Civil War ensues and betrayals become inevitable...
- ^ "I.R.A.: King of Nothing (2006)". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
A disgruntled I.R.A. member (Chapa) becomes Ireland's biggest threat to the peace process.
- ^ Bennett, Ronan (2 April 2009). "The trouble with the Troubles". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ McGartland, Martin (1998). Fifty Dead Men Walking. London, United Kingdom: John Blake Publishing Ltd. ISBN 9781857822014.
- ^ Bradshaw, Peter (31 October 2008). "Hunger review – gets across the nauseous reality of the 'dirty protest'". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ Holmwood, Leigh (8 May 2008). "Nesbitt and Neeson set for Ulster drama". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "Voices from the Grave (2011) | Watch Free Documentaries Online". Docur. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
Voices from the Grave, a 2010 RTE documentary based on the book "Voices from the Grave: Two Men's War in Ireland" by Ed Moloney which examines how the IRA (Irish Republican Army) developed from a brutal guerrilla movement to a governmental party. In the documentary Voices from the Grave, a truly ground-breaking piece of historical evidence is unearthed. Two former paramilitary leaders - one Republican, one loyalist - speak with unprecedented frankness about their role in some of the most appalling violence of the Troubles.
- ^ Maloney, Ed (2010). Voices from the Grave: Two Men's War in Ireland. Faber & Faber. ISBN 9780571253203.
- ^ Wise, Damon (25 January 2012). "Sundance 2012: Shadow Dancer – review". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ Bradby, Tom (1999) [1998]. Shadow Dancer. Corgi Books. ISBN 9780552145862.
- ^ "'71 (2014) | BFI". British Film Institute. 25 March 2016. Archived from the original on 25 March 2016. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
Gary Hook, a new recruit to the British Army, is deployed to Belfast during the Troubles in 1971. Shortly after arriving, Hook is accidentally left behind by his unit following a street riot. Abandoned in a disorientating and deadly environment, Hook attempts to survive the night and find his way to safety.
- ^ "Filming to begin on Ian Paisley and Martin McGuinness 'Chuckle Brothers' comedy drama 'The Journey'". BelfastTelegraph.co.uk. 29 September 2015. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
Filming is to begin tomorrow of the comedy drama The Journey, which tells the story of the unlikely friendship between the late Ian Paisley and Martin McGuinness. The film will tell the story of how the one-time enemies came together to herald the beginning of a new power-sharing agreement between the DUP and Sinn Fein in Northern Ireland.
- ^ "RTÉ announces new Irish drama series 'Rebellion' | The Irish Film & Television Network". www.iftn.ie. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ Travers, Peter (11 October 2017). "'The Foreigner': Jackie Chan Goes the 'Taken' Route in Revenge Thriller". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
His low-key character, named Quan Ngoc Minh, is an immigrant restaurant owner in London. Then the man's life is shattered when his teen daughter Fan (Katie Leung) becomes collateral damage in a terrorist bomb attack. The culprits, Northern Irish radicals who call themselves the new IRA, escape justice. Quan decides to wage his own war.
- ^ Ferguson, Amanda (14 September 2017). "Maze IRA movie is about 'dialogue' not 'glorification', says writer". The Irish Times. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
Based on the real-life story of the 1983 Maze prison break-out orchestrated by republican Larry Marley, the movie explores the story of 38 IRA prisoners' H-Block escape, with varying degrees of success, from one of Europe's most high-security prisons.
- ^ McEvoy, Dermot (7 January 2019). "Irish War of Independence drama "Resistance" opens with a bang". IrishCentral.com. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ O’Hanlon, Eilis (16 October 2019). "Eilis O'Hanlon: BBC NI's The Troubles: A Secret History has produced some jaw-dropping revelations about the 'dirty war' ... but are younger viewers tuning in, or tuning out?". BelfastTelegraph.co.uk. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
- ^ "'Baltimore' Review: Imogen Poots Leads A Moody & Jagged Drama About Heiress Turned Marxist Radical [Telluride]". theplaylist.net. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
To Molloy and Lawlor, "Baltimore"—about a group of rebels who carried out an armed raid on a cherished Palladian stately house, in which 19 art masterpieces were stolen (including Rubens, Goya, and Vermeer) in an effort to support the IRA's armed struggle— and its protagonist, Rose Dugdale, a privileged English debutante turned IRA-sympathizing dissident is clearly personal.
- ^ Power, Ed (28 March 2024). "The Secret Army review: Extraordinary story of lost IRA documentary told in gripping style". The Irish Times. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
- ^ "Exposed: The true story of a lost documentary". BBC News. Retrieved 28 March 2024.