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Hunger

 
Movies:

Hunger

  • Director: Steve McQueen
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Prison Film, Political Drama
  • Themes: Obsessive Quests, Prison Life, Political Unrest
  • Main Cast: Brian Milligan, Liam McMahon, Michael Fassbender, Liam Cunningham, Stuart Graham, Laine Megaw
  • Release Year: 2008
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 92 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: NR

Plot

The final months of Bobby Sands, the Irish Republican Army activist who protested his treatment at the hands of British prison guards with a hunger strike, are chronicled in this historical drama, the first feature film from artist-turned-filmmaker Steve McQueen. Davey Gillen (Brian Milligan) is an IRA volunteer who is sentenced to Belfast's infamous Maze prison, where he shares a cell with fellow IRA member Gerry Campbell (Liam McMahon). Like most of the IRA volunteers behind bars, Gillen and Campbell are subjected to frequent violence by the guards, who in turn live with the constant threat of assassination at the hands of Republicans during their off-hours. Campbell and Gillen are taking part in a protest in which they and their fellow IRA inmates are refusing to wear standard prison-issue uniforms as a protest against Britain's refusal to recognize them as political prisoners, a move that is complicating their efforts to pass information among the other prisoners. As the protest fails to get results, one IRA member behind bars, Bobby Sands (Michael Fassbender), decides to take a different tack and begins a hunger strike, refusing to eat until Irish officials are willing to acknowledge the IRA as a legitimate political organization. However, while Sands' protest gains the attention both inside prison walls and in the international news, not everyone believes what he's doing is right, and Sands finds himself verbally sparring with a priest (Liam Cunningham) who questions the ethics and effectiveness of the strike. Hunger received its world premiere at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival, where it was screened as part of the Un Certain Regard program. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

One doubts that any feature film could more maturely, passionately, or elegantly evoke the madness and confusion at the heart of the early-'80s IRA conflict than Irish director Steve McQueen's harrowing docudrama Hunger. The film unfurls in 1981, around the tail end of the IRA prisoners' "no wash" strike against the Brits, and dramatizes the martyrdom of Irishman Bobby Sands, champion of a hunger strike within a penitentiary -- and a man who led at least nine of his fellow inmates to the grave in pursuit of unascertained political status. Yet the Sands tale only occupies the second half of the picture. Long before we can identify Sands or follow his crusade, McQueen takes his time to establish the overall atmosphere of the prison and, more importantly, the profound and noble ideas at the core of his film.



The deepest truths and insights into McQueen's perspective arrive in an opening sequence, when we observe a British prison employee, Raymond Lohan (Stuart Graham) gazing at himself in the mirror, with a weathered and disillusioned face. Lohan's deep-set, slightly pained eyes aren't eyes that lack a conscience, and his countenance will return to haunt our memories time and again throughout this picture -- likewise, his routine ritual of plunging his bloody, skinned knuckles into warm water to ease the pain. Lohan may be an administrator of brutality (like the other guards, he generates an adequate amount of disdain in the audience, and sympathy toward the prisoners via his brutal actions), but his ability to suffer makes him more human in our eyes -- as does his decision to take flowers to his catatonic mother. Our feelings toward the IRA remain equally balanced; not long after we witness the psychotically violent, perhaps fatal beating of an IRA prisoner (by a uniformed British guard), McQueen interpolates an appalling, sickening act of violence from an IRA terrorist that redefines one's notion of shocking. It comes out of nowhere, unfolds in the sweetest and most benign of locations, and ends with the gunman practically jaunting away merrily, hands in his pockets. The central message is clear: the men on both sides of this fence are neither monsters nor saints. Both the guards and the suffering prisoners have been irrevocably plunged by fate into the same maelstrom of suffering.



Curiously, for a drama about the IRA, the first half of the film completely omits ideological argument and an exploration of the political goings-on at the core of this tumult. And that represents a deliberate choice. For the humanistic McQueen, everything within the prison represents complete insanity -- from the fecal matter smeared on the cell walls, to the slop thrown into bedside troughs, to the maggots swarming around one sleeping prisoner's head, to the said beatings. At the heart of everything, the director reminds us, these men are men, who belong to the same human quilt, and the groups have mutually resigned themselves to the same pit of despair and masochism -- making all external conflicts irrelevant when held up next to the film's gut-wrenching plea for sympathy.



The picture then shifts gears dramatically at about the 45-minute mark, moving into the Sands story, and in what will go down as one of the most audacious directorial choices of 2008, McQueen commits the film and the audience to a fixed shot and a single take for about 20 minutes. Sands (Michael Fassbender) and a priest, Father Dominic Moran (Liam Cunningham), sit on opposite ends of the same table, dissect the pros and cons of martyrdom, and fire arguments at one another on the progression versus regression of the IRA cause. The scene packs an emotional and intellectual wallop: McQueen fully enables us to grasp (and possibly share) the priest's logic, his die-hard conviction that the notion of a hunger strike is absurd and pointless, and his belief that the IRA is a worthy cause but has lost its original foundation, just as the director explores the logic behind Bobby's rebuttals. The fixed shot is thus valuable for keeping the men equidistant from the audience, and underscoring the ideological balance present in the conversation. The film concludes with long, anatomically detailed, and thoroughly devastating sequences of the prisoner withering away to nothing, yet McQueen laces the scenes with lyrical cutaways to Bobby's childhood, hallucinations that his childhood self is visiting him, and images of birds aloft, that draw out the grace and nobility within the man's soul and recall an identical metaphor in Dreyer's Passion of Joan of Arc.

McQueen entitled his picture Hunger, but it just as easily could have been entitled "Equivocation" -- not the equivocation of uncertainty in terms of presentation or approach (nothing could be further from the truth -- every shot here feels perfectly chosen and sustained), but the moral equivocation that results from looking at a multifaceted struggle head-on and realizing that complete empathy with either side, and black-and-white feelings about the logic belying Bobby's final, fatal choices, are virtually impossible without a distortion of the truth. The maturity of this emotionally overwhelming motion picture lies in its patent refusal to paint its characters, situations, or central ideas with broad strokes. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Brian Milligan - Davey Gillen
  • Liam McMahon - Gerry Campbell
  • Michael Fassbender - Bobby Sands
  • Liam Cunningham - Father Dominic Moran
  • Stuart Graham - Raymond Lohan
  • Laine Megaw - Raymond's Wife
Frank McCusker - The Governor; Karen Hassan - Gerry's Girlfriend

Credit

Anushia Nieradzik - Costume Designer, Steve McQueen - Director, Joe Walker - Editor, Edmund Coulthard - Executive Producer, Linda James - Executive Producer, Peter Carlton - Executive Producer, Jan Younghusband - Executive Producer, Iain Canning - Executive Producer, David Holmes - Composer (Music Score), Leo Abrahams - Composer (Music Score), Tom McCullagh - Production Designer, Sean Bobbitt - Cinematographer, Robin Gutch - Producer, Laura Hastings-Smith - Producer, Ronan Hill - Sound/Sound Designer, Mervyn Moore - Sound/Sound Designer, Paul Davies - Sound/Sound Designer, Enda Walsh - Screenwriter, Steve McQueen - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

In the Name of the Father; Cal; A Prayer for the Dying; The Machinist; Gandhi
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Wikipedia: Hunger (2008 film)
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Hunger

Film poster
Directed by Steve McQueen
Produced by Laura Hastings-Smith, Robin Gutch
Written by Enda Walsh and Steve McQueen
Starring Michael Fassbender, Liam Cunningham
Music by Paul Davies
Cinematography Sean Bobbitt
Editing by Joe Walker
Distributed by Icon Entertainment, Pathe Distribution (UK)
Release date(s) 2008
Running time 90 mins
Country Ireland
Language English

Hunger is a 2008 film about the 1981 Irish hunger strike. It is written by Enda Walsh and Steve McQueen, who also directed.[1] It was made by Blast! Films and commissioned by Channel 4 and Film4. It premiered at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival,[2] winning the prestigious Caméra d'Or award for first-time filmmakers.[3] It went on to win the Sydney Film Prize at the Sydney Film Festival, best picture by the Evening Standard British Film Awards, and received 2 BAFTA nominations, winning one. The film was also nominated for 8 awards at the 2009 IFTA's winning 6 at the event.[4]

Hunger was turned down by the Irish Film Board[citation needed] and has gone on to be one of the most successful Irish films. The film was co-funded by Northern Ireland Screen, Broadcast Commission of Ireland and Film 4.

Contents

Plot

The film stars Michael Fassbender as Bobby Sands, the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) volunteer who led the 1981 Irish hunger strike and participated in the no wash protest (led by Brendan "The Dark" Hughes) in which Republican prisoners tried to regain political status. It dramatises events in the Maze prison in the six weeks prior to Sands' death.

The film opens with prison officer Raymond Lohan (Stuart Graham) preparing to leave for work; checking under his car for bombs, putting on his uniform in the locker room and ignoring the camaraderie of his colleagues. We then see short clips of Lohan at various points throughout the day and notice his knuckles are bloodied and cut.

Davey (Brian Milligan), a new IRA prisoner arrives at the prison and, following his refusal to wear the prison uniform, he is labelled a "non-conforming prisoner" and made to strip naked, and given only a blanket. He arrives at his cell where his new roommate, Gerry (Liam McMahon), has smeared the walls with faeces from floor to ceiling. The two men get to know each other and we see them living out their lives, including a visit by family members where we see Sands speak with his parents and Gerry's girlfriend sneaks a radio in by wrapping it and keeping it in her vagina.

We then see the prison officers forcibly and violently removing the prisoners from their cells and beating them before finally pinning them down and using scissors to cut their long hair and beards, grown as part of their no wash protest. Sands fights back and as he's being brought into the room he punches Lohan, who punches him back and then swings again, only to miss and punch the wall, causing his knuckles to bleed. He cuts Sands' hair and beard, the men throw him in the bath tub and scrub him clean before hauling him away again. Lohan is then seen smoking a cigarette, as in the opening scenes, his hand bloodied.

Shortly after this we see a large number of riot officers coming into the prison on a truck. They line up and beat their batons against their shields and scream to scare the prisoners, who are hauled from their cells, then thrown in between the lines of riot police where they are beaten with the batons by at least 10 men. Lohan and several of his colleagues then probe first their anuses and then their mouths, using the same pair of latex gloves for each man. One prisoner head-butts a guard and is beaten brutally by a riot officer.

The next scene shows Lohan entering a retirement home where he sits with his catatonic mother, and brings her daisies. He is shot in the neck by an IRA assassin and dies slumped onto his mother's lap, with her sitting motionless not knowing what happened.

Sands is then shown meeting his priest (Liam Cunningham) and discussing the morality of a hunger strike. This meeting is lengthy and contains important dialogue regarding why Sands chose to do what he did and how strongly he believed in his cause. The rest of the film shows Sands well into his hunger strike, with bleeding sores all over his body, kidney failure, low blood pressure, stomach ulcers, and the inability to stand on his own by the end. Emotionally powerful, the film spares no detail in Sands' condition and suffering, as we see him get worse and continue to refuse food. In the last days, while Sands lies in a bath, a larger orderly comes in to give his usual orderly a break. The larger orderly sits next to the tub and shows Sands his knuckles, which are tattooed with the letters "UDA", for Ulster Defence Association. Sands tries to stand on his own and eventually does so with all his strength, staring defiantly at the UDA orderly who refused to help him up, but then he crumbles in a heap on the floor with no strength left to stand. The orderly carries him to his room.

Sands' parents arrive and stay there for the final days, and his mother is at his side when Sands finally loses his life.

The film explains that Sands had been elected to the British Parliament as MP for Fermanagh and South Tyrone while he was on strike. Nine other men died with him during the seven-month strike, causing the British government to cave in to the demands of prisoner rights, despite never officially granting political status to the prisoners.

Cast

Production

The film is notable for an unbroken 17-minute shot, in which a priest played by Liam Cunningham tries to talk Bobby Sands out of his protest. In it, the camera remains in the same position for the duration of the shot. To prepare for the scene, Cunningham moved into Michael Fassbender's apartment for a time while they practised the scene at least twelve times a day, sometimes repeating the scene fifteen times in a single day. It is the longest scene in a mainstream film.[5]

The film premiered at Cannes, where it opened the official sidebar section, Un Certain Regard, sparking both walkouts and a standing ovation. The film was released in the UK and Ireland 31 October 2008.

Critical reception

The film appeared on some critics' top ten lists of the best films of 2008. Andrea Gronvall of Chicago Reader named it the 3rd best film of 2008,[6] and Scott Foundas of LA Weekly named it the 3rd best film of 2008 (along with Che).[6] Eric Armstrong of The Moving Arts Film Journal gave a favorable review, calling the film "...a deeply disturbing sensory experience."

Hunger was voted the best film of 2008 by Sight and Sound Magazine.[7] Hunger won the 2009 Evening Standard British Film Awards.[8] Director McQueen won the Carl Forman BAFTA Award for "Special Achievement by a British Director, Writer or Producer for their First Feature Film".[9]

American film critic Armond White gave a negative review of the film stating that McQueen's "attempts to enlarge a secular story through religious references feel superficial" and that the film resembles "a self-congratulatory art project".[10]

References

External links


 
 
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