Irish director Pat O'Connor helmed this adaptation of Brian Friel's 1990 play which won three Tony awards in addition to UK Olivier and Evening Standard awards. Friel's portrait of five Irish sisters takes place in 1936 on a Donegal farm. The unmarried Mundy sisters are barely surviving. Middle-aged schoolteacher Kate (Meryl Streep) is the eldest, overseeing pretty Christina (Catherine McCormack), lively Maggie (Kathy Burke, re-creating her Tony award-winning role), reliable Agnes (Brid Brennan), and Rose (Sophie Thompson), who has a secret affair with a married man. Christina is the mother of eight-year-old Michael (Darrell Johnston), beneficiary of much attention from his four aunts. The story of a turning-point summer is told in retrospect by the adult Michael and begins when the sisters welcome their older brother Jack (Michael Gambon) as he returns home from missionary work in Africa. Michael's father Gerry Evans (Rhys Ifans) makes an unexpected arrival, winning back both Michael and mom before joining the International Brigade to fight Franco in Spain. Kate loses her teaching position, and the sister's income from their handwoven clothing is threatened by the announced opening of a woolens factory. Shown at 1998 fests (Venice, Toronto). ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi
Beautiful landscapes of Ireland along with the rustic houses and pastoral scenes. Entire movie filmed in Ireland. I happened to have just seen the stageplay before seeing the movie and so it was great to view the offstage happenings. The movie necessarily moves more slowly than the play (which doesn't move that fast). Meryl Streep is, as usual, wonderful. I am a Protestant but enjoyed the script which most Catholics would probably appreciate, although depressing, as the story is basically a trajedy.
Streep's role of the head of this family presents her as a woman who has forgotten the joy in living life; family patterns that go on forever, unless one person has the courage to change them.
I should have read more reviews before checking this one out. The acting, costuming, and authentic landscape were very good but the story itself left me feeling more depressed than "enchanted", surely. The final notes were the nails in the dreary-gone-worse tale. It wasn't what I was hoping for and not what I needed to see in the midst of this turbulent year. Guess that's my fault. Won't be seeing this again...