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Winner of the Palme D'or for Best Picture at the Cannes Film Festival
It's 1920, and Damien O'Donovan (Cillian Murphy) has recently graduated from medical school. Damien plans to leave the small village in Ireland where he was born to take a job in London, much to the annoyance of his brother Teddy (Padraic Delaney), who is an Irish loyalist and wants to see the British stripped of their rule of his land. While visiting Peggy (Mary Riordan), a longtime friend of the family, Damien and Teddy witness a visit by "Black and Tans," British soldiers who supposedly keep the peace in Ireland; the soldiers turn violent and murder Michaeil (Lawrence Barry), Peggy's grandson, when they discover he only speaks Gaelic.
Damien is radicalized by the event, and with Teddy joins the local unit of the Irish Republican Army (IRA), who use guerrilla warfare to drive British troops out of the country. While the IRA is a poor and ill-equipped fighting force, their willingness to give their lives for their cause is taken very seriously by the British, who step up their reprisals against the locals; the Black and Tans even begin directing their violence and torture against women and children, including Damien's girlfriend, Sinead (Orla Fitzgerald).
In 1921, Britain attempts to end the violence in Ireland by creating the Irish Free State, a compromise government which will give the Irish greater autonomy while Great Britain still retains final political control of the nation. Teddy sees this as a victory and believes it's an important first step to a truly free Ireland, but Damien sees the IRA's goal as nothing short of complete independence, and the brothers and allies soon become rivals in a battle neither side can win.
** Please note that this DVD is in PAL (European format) - it will play on Region 2 DVD players and multi-region players along with most laptops**
Posted by Peter Dempsey on 15th May 2012
This is a very good film which shows the sacrifice and sorrow that the Irish took at the time to free part of their land and the grief that accompanied the civil war that followed. This is not a film about heroic actions, (though there are heroic action scenes in it) but a film about the terrible cost that was paid. It is unrelenting in the way it shows how families and friends were torn asunder in the chaos and the final scene is heartbreaking. It also shows how idealism was broken by the reality of the conflict. I think a certain politician in Fianna Fáil should watch it and he might change his opinion of the Troubles and the Tan Wars.