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Dancing at Lughnasa

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Dancing at Lughnasa

Five unmarried sisters make the most of their simple existence in rural Ireland in the 1930s.

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Release : 1998
Rating : 6.3
Studio : Fís Éireann/Screen Ireland,  RTÉ,  Film4 Productions, 
Crew : Production Design,  Director of Photography, 
Cast : Meryl Streep Catherine McCormack Brid Brennan Kathy Burke Sophie Thompson
Genre : Drama

Cast List

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Reviews

CrawlerChunky
2018/08/30

In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.

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Aneesa Wardle
2018/08/30

The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.

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Sarita Rafferty
2018/08/30

There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.

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Geraldine
2018/08/30

The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.

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Byrdz
2017/03/10

It's a pleasant enough little film that gives a look at 1930's Ireland via a family of five single sisters and a missionary brother, a love child and that child's wayward father.The acting is fine. The script worth listening to. But it's just another look at the daily events in the life of a rural Irish family. Nothing special. Nothing compelling. As is common with films, the characters are just dumped out and not properly introduced. They all look somewhat alike and it's shot with poor lighting which makes it difficult to tell just who is who.Of all the people in the film the elder brother and the vagabond lover/father are the most interesting.Have some time to spend? You could do worse but you could do better. It's just nothing special.

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celtic_chief
2016/01/25

I cannot understand how so many people have just given this classic play by the great Brian Friel just an average score. I take it they are incapable of understanding the deeper meaning to great European films like this. I guess if it doesn't include expensive props, they are incapable of reading under the surface. I had read this play many years ago, and loved it, and I had put off watching the film until recently. This has to be one of the greatest films that I have ever seen and one that is full worthy of a 10/10. Excellent performances by all, a powerful script, great directing. This is a must for everyone who wants more than fast cars and expensive props.

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Richard Burin
2010/06/11

Dancing at Lughnasa (Pat O'Connor, 1996) is an oddly muted drama in which nothing really happens, for an hour and a half. "Progress is a comfortable disease," observed grammar-phobic poet e e cummings. For him, maybe, but for five unmarried sisters in '30s Ireland, it's anything but, as the march of time throws their life together into jeopardy. The spectre of industry and dwindling school rolls are looming, threatening to put teacher Meryl Streep (who is really annoying here, sometimes intentionally) and professional knitters Sophie Thompson and Brid Brennan out of work and break up the family unit. Not that they seem very happy to begin with, bickering and casting light on another's neuroses in a way that becomes quickly wearing very quickly. There's love in the house, for sure, but there's a lot more repression and glumness, much of it uninteresting and trite.As well as the breadwinners, we meet happy-go-lucky Kathy Burke, fifth sister Catherine McCormack - spending a summer with returning lover Rhys Ifans - a clergyman brother ravaged by dementia (Michael Gambon), and young Darrell Johnston, the story told through his eyes. The film has uniformly good performances, but it's often clichéd and unenlightening, with an opening and closing voice-over that apes How Green Was My Valley and seems to bear little relation to the action in between. On the plus side, occasional moments of insight peek through the overbearing script and there are two really good scenes. One has the family flicking through a photo album and recalling lost love; it's a quiet tour-de-force from Burke. The other, which partly gives the film its title, is simply great, as the sisters begin dancing to a song on the radio, their celebrations growing ever more feverish until they spill out into the yard. It's a moment of sheer wonder amid much muddled misery.

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RedAzaelia
2006/12/15

I watched this movie two years ago while involved in a production of the stage version of the play. My complaint is a common one: stage does not translate well to screen. For instance, anyone who has gone to see, or was involved in, the stage production of Rent will tell you that the movie pales in comparison. The same is true of Dancing At Lughnasa, though the play is not nearly so well-known.My fellow cast members and I were all collectively unimpressed with the movie, and our initial response was "What?". We were already wrapped up in the Dancing At Lughnasa play experience, so perhaps it was different for us than it would be for someone unfamiliar with the play. We just were not drawn in by the movie.It was interesting to see one person's adaptation of the script, and to see the play performed by age-appropriate cast members instead of high school students, but over all, it was ultimately forgettable. Meryl Streep excels as usual, and the acting is alright for the most part, though Michael Gambon is woefully miscast. However, not even Meryl Streep can redeem this movie.The movie's downfall is that it lacks the warmth, intimacy, and heart of the play, and I honestly did not like the movie at all for just that reason. The play is set solely in the Mundy household, while the movie ventures into the town of Ballybeg, up to Lough Anna, and into the Back Hills in an effort to show us a more complete picture. Perhaps the filmmakers believed the audience would be bored or wearied by the little change in scenery, and lots of description of outside events through dialog that the play features. However, the changes disrupt the heartbeat of the story and cause it to appear disjointed and clunky, and suddenly the center of the play, which is the closeness of the five sisters, is lost.The other major problem is that the play is a memory play. That is, it takes place entirely within the memory of one character, in this case the young man Michael. That sense of a young man looking back on one intense, memorable summer is lost in the movie, because instead of having the narrator Michael speak the lines for the boy Michael, there is a young actor who plays the role of the boy. Because I was so familiar and involved with the stage script, in which the boy Michael never appears in physical form and instead is spoken for by the young man Michael as he remembers, I was disoriented by that great difference.Perhaps others who have never read or performed in the play of Dancing At Lughnasa would enjoy it much more than I did. However, I cannot be objective about the film because I love the play so much. My opinion remains.I would highly recommend reading the script, or better yet, going to see a production of the play, instead of watching the movie.The play is a masterpiece of theater.The film is merely mediocre by comparison.

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