post_page_cover

That They May Face the Rising Sun Featured, Reviews, Uncategorized Film Threat

Nov 26, 2023

John McGahern was one of the most celebrated Irish authors of his time, and this film adapts his last great masterpiece. That They May Face the Rising Sun (released in America as On the Lake) is a thinly fictionalized novel about his move to Fenagh in the west of Ireland around the start of the eighties, following a long spell in London with his wife. It was published just four years before he died of cancer in 2006.
The plot, such as it is, concerns Joe Ruttledge and his wife Kate (Barry Ward and Anna Bederke), who have bought a small cottage by a lake on around twenty acres of land in remote Leitrim, Joe’s ancestral home on his father’s side. These childless artists don’t make great farmers, and their lives, as shown here, seem mostly taken up with dealings with the locals and some vestigial ties to London and its art scene.
“…despite coming off poorly in the habitual sparring of the bored seniors.”
Home for about five years, they are still effectively interlopers on several levels. The locals are nearly all ancient. It’s forever since the countryside was ‘walking with people’ as one of them puts it. The land has emptied itself of its young with decades of diaspora. The bewhiskered specimens who are left are not only from a different time but another country in a sense, all born just on the other side of the Easter Rising.  
The patrician good looks of Barry Ward and the exotic finesse of Anna Bederke lend themselves well to the leads. Joe and Kate embody the ‘towny’ at first glance. Their sharpness and luster stand out firmly against a populace as wizened as ancient woodland.
Despite living behind a hill from the world, the auld fellas always seem to hold all the aces. For example, Patrick Ryan, a farmer played meticulously by Lalor Roddy, jumps up from the Rutledge kitchen table to stage some fiery lines from Synge’s The Playboy of the Western World with a pal. It turns out he’s an ardent actor, despite living in what he (very accurately) describes as ‘a room full of sticks’. This role felt like the highlight of the film. Roddy channels the energies of a regional hinterland like a wizard, making hay with a great deal of cherishable dialogue from the book. 

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
Publisher: Source link

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
The Internet Has Officially Lost It Over Andrew Garfield's Slutty Glasses

That man knew exactly what he was doing with those glasses.View Entire Post › Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.Publisher: Source link

Jan 9, 2025

Armie Hammer Lands First Movie Role Since Cannibalism Allegations

Armie Hammer Cameos As “Kannibal Ken” in Music Video 4 Years After Cannibalism ClaimsArmie Hammer is heading back to the big screen.  More than one year after the Los Angeles Police Department ended their lengthy investigation into the Call Me…

Jan 9, 2025

20 Best Dressed Men At The 2025 Golden Globes

20 Best Dressed Men At The 2025 Golden Globes The televised portion of awards season is here! On Sunday night, the Golden Globes were held in Los Angeles, kicking off what looks to be a lively next several months of…

Jan 8, 2025

Tom Cruise & Nicole Kidman’s Son Connor Shares 2025 Update in New Pic

Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman's Son Connor Cruise Golfs With Crocodile in New PostTom Cruise and Nicole Kidman's son is teeing up for a great year. Connor Cruise recently kicked off 2025 at the links, swinging by Lost City Golf…

Jan 8, 2025