Middletown Reviews

A Belfast Screener's review of Middletown (Oct 2006)

 

Mrs Q found this review. Thank you!

David Minogue wrote is his blog an review of Middletown which he saw in Belfast on Friday, October 13, 2006. I have included a few teasers, but READ MORE to see the full review.

...As I bringing a friend to see it I asked the staff member who gave me the tickets did she know what the film genre was, to which she replied she thought it was a horror. So I half expected it to be, the then unreleased "Saw III" or William Friedkin's ultra gory forthcoming "Bug" maybe, whereas, both of us squeamish,...

...So I watched this film with a sense of dread but by the end of it left it with the knowing that while it went completely over the top two thirds in it was a very well shot, generally well acted...

...It is well directed by Brian Kirk and the screenplay by Daragh Carville is, for the most part one that keeps the attention throughout. There is a fine supporting cast, all Irish actors,...

...Matthew McFadyen is unrecognisable as his former literary leading man as Darcy...

 

Read more below

 

 

Middletown Review by Burke (Nov 2006)

Middletown
 
MiddletownDirector: Brian Kirk. Starring: Mathew Macfayden, Daniel Mays, Gerard McSorley, Eva Birthistle.

Details: Ireland / 88mins (15A). After spending most of his adult life in a religious institution, Father Gabriel Hunter (Macfayden) returns to instil some values his hometown has lost since he was away. The town, in his eyes, has slipped from the readings of the Bible, and Gabriel is determined to return his people to the path of righteousness. His brother Jim's (Mays) gambling and drinking is first on the agenda before Gabriel moves onto his heavily pregnant sister-in-law, Caroline (Birthwistle), who works in the town pub. Gabriel's fire-and-brimstone speeches don't go over well with Caroline at all, and when she refuses to go to church, it creates an unbearable tension in the family. It's back to the bad old days of the '60s when the church ruled the roost in Ireland, and director Brian Kirk takes a very heavy-handed approach to this age-old material. At 88 minutes, Middletown is a little short to tell the story it wants to tell, as everything seems rushed and the events get out of hand far too quickly. Macfayden plays the puritanical priest like a caricature of Robert Mitchum's role in Night of the Hunter, and is so devoid of character, it's hard to take him seriously (maybe I'm being too hard on Macfayden because Gabriel seems like a brief sketch rather than a flesh-and-blood person).Mays fares a little better as he's got much more to do - but the best performance on view is from Birthistle, the only one to seem at home with her character.

**


Film Review by Gavin Burke
Reviewed on 07 November 2006

Middletown (2006)

Small town tale fails to ignite

Irish Times Going Out

It is always heartening to see Irish-made, funded and filmed movies making it into Irish cinemas. So it was with no small degree of goodwill that the Brian Kirk directed feature film Middletown was greeted.

Funded partly by the Northern Ireland Film and Television Commission and filmed wholly in the north, Middletown managed to have - on paper at least - a veritable cornucopia of Irish acting talent filling out the cast.

Names such as Mick Lally, Richard Dormer, Sorcha Cusack, Gerard McSorley, Frankie McCafferty, Bronagh Gallagher and Lalor Roddy will be well known to anyone familiar with Irish theatre and television.

Another non-Irish but still familiar face takes up the lead role - English rising star Matthew MacFadyen whose star has been on the rise ever since appearing alongside Keira Knightley in the costume drama Pride and Prejudice.

In fact it was to some surprise that MacFadyen announced that he would be taking the role of Reverend Gabriel Hunter in this small independent Irish film when at the time of the announcement in late 2005 he was being courted by many of the big Hollywood studios. Testament to that is the fact that he has just finished filming a Frank Oz directed picture entitled Death at a Funeral.

Director Brian Kirk and his backers must have considerable powers - be it of a monetary or persuasive nature - to have assembled such a cast for a relatively small film. Add to this the writing talent of well-known playwright Darragh Carville and you would assume that there is little that could go wrong with this picture.

Unfortunately and perplexingly Middletown is a film that never fulfils expectations.

It is the story of small town Ireland and of religious zealotry - of which Ireland has had plenty over the years - conflicting with more secular concerns and forces. It is also the story of family and of two brothers whose lives are travelling in different directions but who eventually collide after years apart.

Throughout Irish cinema, television and theatre these themes have been perennial ones but they have been explored so many times now that it is difficult to see the merit of revisiting such themes.

Regardless of what may be perceived as the dated nature of these themes there is no doubt that the way they have been approached leaves a lot to be desired.

The story begins in the front row pew of the local Protestant church, where a young boy named Gabriel (Matthew MacFadyen) sits as his father and a preacher tell him: "There are certain people who are chosen by God for some special purposes of His own. And we believe you are such a one."

Thus unfolds the destiny of Gabriel. After almost an entire lifetime spent in religious instruction, Gabriel returns to his small Irish town as the new preacher. But the town is full of drinking and gambling, and Gabriel's younger brother Jim (Daniel Mays) and sister-in-law Caroline (Eva Birthistle) are no exceptions.

Soon Gabriel learns that Caroline does not attend church, and runs the pub across from the church which opens on the Sabbath.

Jim, the flat-broke black sheep of the family, quickly becomes caught between his brother's beliefs and his wife's strong-mindedness. As a messenger of God, Gabriel believes he must save the townspeople, especially his brother, his sister-in-law, the couple's unborn child and indeed his own father.

MacFadyen and Mays are convincing in their roles as the two quite different brothers.

Mays plays the black sheep well and manages to shoe-horn himself into the role despite being badly cast. He looks nothing like his brother and it is inconceivable that he would have attracted the attention of the good-looking Caroline, what with his wild lifestyle and his lack of good looks and money.

As the overzealous reverend whose religious fervour leads him to a sort of madness, MacFadyen, despite a script that leaves him with few lines of any substance or depth, manages to bring the audience with him. But for the most part the script leaves him repeating scripture and preaching, which had little effect but to become tiresome through its repetition.

Richard Dormer, famed for his stage portrayal of snooker legend Alex Higgins in Hurricane, is perhaps the star of the show. He plays the wild and quick-fisted local butcher who is something of a nemesis to Jim yet Dormer's small role highlights the main problem, which are central to any criticisms of Middletown.

Characters such as Dormer's butcher are colourful secondary characters and would have helped to keep the audience interested in the central story, yet these periphery figures are not given enough time or space to blossom and fill out the central plot.

To use Irish cinematic classic The Field as an example, there are a number of ‘locals' who really add to the central plot of the Jim Sheridan-directed film which is as bleak and brutal as Middletown.

Why did the director and the writers not make more use of the talents of Mick Lally, Bronagh Gallagher, Frankie McCafferty and Sorcha Cusack to bring the town of Middletown to life?

As it is the stories of Jim and Gabriel become less and less believable as the story progresses towards its climax. When the ending does come it is rather perplexing and unconvincing that such a thing should occur and the viewer is left with a feeling that we do not fully appreciate why these things are happening.

  • Middletown is in cinemas on Friday, November 3.

RATING 6/10

Middletown: Another Cork Review (Oct 2006)

Middletown 2 out of 4 stars

The scariest preacher ever to have appeared in a movie was most certainly the one played by Robert Mitchum in Charles Laughton's The Night of the Hunter. And the messenger of God in Judaism, Christianity and Islam is the angel Gabriel. So it may not be entirely a coincidence that the scary preacher in this movie is named Gabriel Hunter. He is played by Matthew Macfadyen, who was last seen playing Mr. Darcy to Keira Kightley's Lizzie Bennet in Pride & Prejudice. His Gabriel has returned to his titular hometown in Northern Ireland to take the reins of the local Church of God. Gabriel has undergone years of vaguely described religious training and missionary work, and he has now come home, without the slightest ounce of doubt in his mind, to

Middletown: Review from Cork Film Festival (Oct 2006)

51st Cork Film Festival: Highlights

Middletown By Iain Houten and Michael John O’Shea
17/10/2006


Director: Brian Kirk

Running time: 88 minutes

As the most high-profile home-grown film at the festival, the screening of Middletown was met with keen interest. Supported by well known actors and directed by prolific programme maker Brian Kirk, it tells the story of Gabriel(Matthew McFadyen ), a man who in his early youth is urged by his Father and the village Reverend to answer Gods calling and become a preacher of the faith. Cut to fifteen years later and the village has fallen into an apparent state of Godlessness. The ailing Reverend is retiring and Gabriel returns from the missions in Africa to take his place. The film examines the friction that occurs between Gabriel, his family and the entire village as he attempts to reinstate Biblical law. He becomes compelled beyond reason to cleanse his flock, creating more evil than he could ever have hoped to vanquish.

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