Desmonds Frau verlässt ihn und ihre 3 Kinder nach Weihnachten 1953. In Dublin sind die Kinder arbeitslos und werden von den Behörden in Waisenhäusern untergebracht. Wieder angestellt, versuc... Alles lesenDesmonds Frau verlässt ihn und ihre 3 Kinder nach Weihnachten 1953. In Dublin sind die Kinder arbeitslos und werden von den Behörden in Waisenhäusern untergebracht. Wieder angestellt, versucht Desmond, seine Kinder zurückzubekommen.Desmonds Frau verlässt ihn und ihre 3 Kinder nach Weihnachten 1953. In Dublin sind die Kinder arbeitslos und werden von den Behörden in Waisenhäusern untergebracht. Wieder angestellt, versucht Desmond, seine Kinder zurückzubekommen.
- Auszeichnungen
- 4 Gewinne & 7 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Maurice Doyle
- (as Hugh Macdonagh)
- Mrs. Daisley
- (as Claire Mullan)
- Brother Eustace
- (as Daithi O'Suillebhain)
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesEvelyn's mother is said to have gone to Australia with her lover, but in reality, she went to England and ended up raising another family there. The real Evelyn Doyle eventually saw her mother on more than one occasion, but they never reconciled.
- PatzerThe movie, set in the 1950s, features Irish television. Ireland's television station RTE was established on New Years Day 1962.
- Zitate
Michael Beattie: To fight church and state is to fight Goliath.
Desmond Doyle: Yeah, well, David beat Goliath in the book I read.
- Crazy CreditsSlippery Sam is the greyhound who wins the race.
- VerbindungenReferenced in Evelyn: Behind the Scenes (2003)
Now along comes "Evelyn" which also is about poor people in 1950s Ireland, but this seems to be the Hallmark greeting card version. The father (played by Pierce Brosnan using, I imagine, his native accent) does drink, but he's not at all mean about it, his kids are angelic and the mother who abandons them only gets about five minutes of screen time and is soon forgotten. There are relatives who may not like one another but are united in their love for the kids (an enjoyable scene has Evelyn, the daughter, running back and forth conveying messages between two of them). There are a lot of well-meaning friends and acquaintances. They live in a nice home and don't seem to be starving or barefoot. It almost seems no big deal when the mother leaves; if anything, one supposes what little money they have will go further, with one fewer mouth to feed (there's an obligatory scene with Brosnan versus a boiling pot because, of course, all men are morons in the kitchen).
So it seems a little odd when government minions step in and announce that nice Mr. Doyle whose wife left him can't keep his kids any more. Now I know this is based on a true story and I know from other sources there was indeed a vast orphanage gulag (complete with slave labor) in Ireland, partly so that church and state could pretend it's possible to have a functioning country without divorce or abortion (and there was always nearby England). Some of that background would have been fascinating in "Evelyn," but maybe too depressing. So we just have to accept that here's this quaint country with this goofy law arbitrarily taking people's kids away. Doyle readily accedes to the removal, then abruptly wants them back. His efforts make up the remainder of the movie.
The problem here is what psychologists call "cognitive dissonance": on the one hand we're constantly reminded that the struggle of Doyle and his supporters against the church/state hierarchy is "hopeless," on the other hand, there's never really a sensation of hopelessness or desperation. There's a kind of amiable smoothness to the events, and frequent humorous moments. This may be partly due to the guiding hand of director Bruce Beresford who has never met a dramatic situation that he couldn't make cozy, whether it was the Boer War in "Breaker Morant," Southern racial tensions in "Driving Miss Daisy," capital punishment in "Last Dance" or Japanese POW camps in "Paradise Road," the latter also with J. Margulies from "ER." The orphanages in which the kids live don't even seem that unpleasant aside from one fascistic nun whose misdeeds get exposed anyway. The real horror of the Irish orphanage gulag was that it was swept under the rug for decades. This movie functions under a "sunshine law," literally; I don't want to "spoil" the big climactic scene for anyone, but let's just say that if they ever do another version of "Alice in Wonderland," spunky little Sophie Vavasseur is just the one to stand up (and up, and up) and tell all the high muckamucks they're all just a pack of cards.
I hope this isn't making it seem I didn't enjoy the movie; quite the contrary. I especially liked the ordinary-joe quality of Brosnan's Doyle, neither sinister nor saintly, fumbling his way toward becoming a better man for his kids' sake. If anything, I wish they'd given him a few more "warts," if only to make the point that if a parent is not clearly abusing his or her kids, then those kids belong with the parent, and not with the sodding government, or church. Nice to see some of my favorites like Stephen Rea and Aidan Quinn and Alan Bates being such good sports. Julianna M. gets probably her most "normal" film role yet, and shows (at least to me) why she should be a major star. She exudes realness. When male characters contend for her, I buy it. Can't say that about every actress, some of whom probably get paid a lot more for their roles (sorry, Sandra Bullock).
Basically this is a "feel-good" flick, and we can always use those. But like the orphans still behind the walls at the end, there is a darker theme still waiting for it's moment in the sun.
By the way, dog-racing's not a very nice thing either.
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Offizieller Standort
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Evelyn
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Box Office
- Budget
- 10.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 1.487.645 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 65.344 $
- 15. Dez. 2002
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 4.186.916 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 34 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1