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The Molly Maguires

  • 1970
  • PG
  • 2h 4m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
4.6K
YOUR RATING
The Molly Maguires (1970)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer2:52
1 Video
99+ Photos
Period DramaDramaHistory

In 1876 Pennsylvania, a group of Irish immigrant coal miners begin to retaliate against the cruelty of their work environment.In 1876 Pennsylvania, a group of Irish immigrant coal miners begin to retaliate against the cruelty of their work environment.In 1876 Pennsylvania, a group of Irish immigrant coal miners begin to retaliate against the cruelty of their work environment.

  • Director
    • Martin Ritt
  • Writers
    • Arthur H. Lewis
    • Walter Bernstein
  • Stars
    • Sean Connery
    • Richard Harris
    • Samantha Eggar
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    4.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Martin Ritt
    • Writers
      • Arthur H. Lewis
      • Walter Bernstein
    • Stars
      • Sean Connery
      • Richard Harris
      • Samantha Eggar
    • 49User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
    • 62Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:52
    Official Trailer

    Photos109

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    + 104
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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Sean Connery
    Sean Connery
    • Jack Kehoe
    Richard Harris
    Richard Harris
    • Detective James McParlan
    Samantha Eggar
    Samantha Eggar
    • Miss Mary Raines
    Frank Finlay
    Frank Finlay
    • Davies
    Anthony Zerbe
    Anthony Zerbe
    • Dougherty
    Bethel Leslie
    Bethel Leslie
    • Mrs. Kehoe
    Art Lund
    Art Lund
    • Frazier
    Philip Bourneuf
    Philip Bourneuf
    • Father O'Connor
    Anthony Costello
    Anthony Costello
    • Frank McAndrew
    Brendan Dillon
    Brendan Dillon
    • Mr. Raines
    Frances Heflin
    • Mrs. Frazier
    John Alderson
    John Alderson
    • Jenkins
    Malachy McCourt
    Malachy McCourt
    • Bartender
    Susan Goodman
    • Mrs. McAndrew
    Ian Abercrombie
    Ian Abercrombie
    • Stock Actor
    • (uncredited)
    William Clune
    • Franklin Gowen
    • (uncredited)
    Bill Daly
    Bill Daly
    • Colliery Boy
    • (uncredited)
    Nick Dimitri
    Nick Dimitri
    • Policeman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Martin Ritt
    • Writers
      • Arthur H. Lewis
      • Walter Bernstein
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews49

    6.84.5K
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    Featured reviews

    8slightlymad22

    Under Rated & Forgotten Gem Filled With Great Performances

    Molly Maguires (1970)

    Plot In A Paragraph: A terrorist group known as the Molly Maguires has been sabotaging a coal mine in Pennsylvania where they in fact work. Detective James McParlan (Richard Harris) must infiltrate the group led by John Kehoe (Connery) Throughout the film McParlan's allegiances are tested. Will he side with the Maguires and become a true member, or keep his mission in mind and bring an end to the group??

    This for me is Connery's best performance to date. I personally think he is brilliant here!! But once again audiences and the Academy did not care, and ignored the movie. Richard Harris (billed above Connery, even though Connery was paid more and was the bigger star) is a funny actor to me, I've never really taken to him, there was just always something about him I didn't like, but I can't fault his work here.

    The movie is so powerful (at least to me) and deserves to be seen as it's filled with fantastic performances. The first line of dialogue doesn't come till about 15 minutes in, with Connery not speaking until about the 40th minute despite being one of the first characters introduced on screen. Director Martin Ritt wanted to film this in black and white, but Paramount were worried it would put off movie goers.

    Molly Maguires was another Connery movie to fail at the box office, and it failed in a big way, grossing only $2 million at the domestic box office on a budget of $11 million.
    chaos-rampant

    "You buy decency like you buy a loaf of bread"

    This is one of the great immigrant movies; it speaks in a manner simple and concise about what it means to be the outsider, to be used and abused and your voice never heard, to be at the bottom of the barrel looking up. It speaks about despair violence and moral devastation in the Pennsylvania coal mines of 1876, about right and wrong, law and ethos, and their flipsides, violence and anarchy. The movie's characters have amazingly human needs, some of them to be heard in that shanty town of Pennsylvania and others to get away from it. Richard Harris plays one of the most fascinating complex characters I've seen. I love his type of character so much because he's the villain, the one we must boo, but he doesn't give a damn about our booing, he doesn't look for absolution or forgiveness in the end. I like characters who have what it takes to be the bad guy.

    He's paid to infiltrate a radical group of coalworkers, The Molly Maguires, find out who they are and give them up. For a time he sympathizes with their cause, he goes down to the coal mines and comes out with the same paste of coaldust grime and sweat on his face and gets paid 24 cents a week for it, but when he needs to name names he does so without flinching. Like the Irish coal miners he mingles with, he's a man "at the bottom of the barrel", but unlike them, he wants to be at the top of the barrel looking down. He finds love, his boarding lady who's desperate to get out of that coaldusted hellhole, a woman of strict ethics who wants decency and lawfulness. He tells her that "you buy decency and respectability like you buy a loaf of bread", so that he recognizes the futility of the Mollies' struggle and can't help to be drawn to it, to that fleeting sparkle of futile human defiance against injustice. But that's not the movie's meridian, although it feels so at the time. A little later we get a magnificent discussion in a tavern, during a wake, between himself and Sean Connery, brooding leader of the Mollies', where Richard Harris tells him that he'll never die, that he's going to live forever.

    It struck me like a brick, like reading Judge Holden speak to his scalphunter comrades in Blood Meridian around a campfire in the middle of the desert, because essentially and metaphorically, that is true; everybody else will pass away, the men who struggle and fight oppression and the men who die "without making a pip", but Richard Harris will live forever. He's deceit everlasting, the cosmic trickster. During their trial, when the prosecutor against the Mollies' calls for the first witness, a door to an adjacent room opens and we see Richard Harris calmly playing cards with the police captain, a man he has nothing but contempt for. In the end, there's neither punishment nor forgiveness for him, he's beyond all that, a little above and beyond everything else, damnation and vengeance, beyond even love or self-pity, human compassion and regret too. In the end he walks by a newly erected scaffold being tested by prison wardens, and he simply walks away never looking back. He's not even going away to Denver, Colorado, to be in charge of a detective agency there, he goes beyond that, [...] he never sleeps, he says that he will never die, he dances in light and in shadow and he is a great favourite, he never sleeps, he says that he will never die. Perfect.

    What's not perfect is the bogus score by Henry Mancini, basically upbeat irish folk reworkings. Maybe 16 Horsepower should redo this one.
    joebartoniii

    Strong performances carry historical drama

    A must-see for any Irish-American. Harris is superb in his role as an undercover Pinkerton investigator. We see his character grow to admire the maguires even though he knows he will eventually betray them. Connery is also great as the attractive leader of the terrorist group. This movie touches on an area tha is often ignored, working conditions in 19th Century America. I especially like the American Football/Rugby hybrid they play against the Welsh town. A unique movie that let's us see both Harris and Connery shine. Good score, pacing, photography, and supporting characters as well. One of my favs!
    9bkoganbing

    Ring of Gaelic Authenticity

    According to the Films of Sean Connery, the genesis of The Molly Maguires was a visit to the set of Director Martin Ritt;s Hombre in which Connery's then wife Diane Cilento was in the cast. Ritt had the idea for The Molly Maguires back then and asked Connery if he'd give him the commitment. Connery was intrigued and said yes. But it took over four years to get the project rolling.

    The Molly Maguires has the ring of authenticity to it because Martin Ritt chose to shoot it in an almost abandoned Pennsylvania coal town of Ecksley. Filming the story in a place where the Molly Maguires were active lends a lot of credibility to the film.

    The Mollys were a secret cell within the Catholic fraternal society of the Ancient Order of Hibernians. The Irish immigrants spread all over America and a good deal of them arrived in the Pennsylvania coal country where they became miners. A trade not unknown in Ireland as that country has considerable deposits of the stuff.

    The workers were terribly exploited, having to live in the company town, buy at the company store, and pay for damaged equipment. That together with the health problems we know now about in the mining industry.

    There was no organized labor movement yet and the Mollys were at times the only protections those miners had. They'd be considered terrorists now, but an important thing to remember is that unlike today's terrorists, their acts of violence were never random.

    One thing I did like was the fact that the company policeman were Protestant and Welsh. That was the generation who were the previous people in the mines. The next generation of coal miners were from Eastern Europe, but that's getting ahead of ourselves. The ethnic conflicts are quite explicit in this film.

    Richard Harris plays James McParlan another Irish immigrant sent by the Pinkerton Detective Agency to infiltrate and destroy the Mollys. Connery is Jack Kehoe the leader of them and very suspicious of Harris when he first arrives to work at the mines.

    The story as told in the film sticks pretty close to the truth of what happened in Pennsylvania in the 1870s. Informers are not a group that's looked up to in any culture, but the Irish traditionally do have a special disdain for them.

    The film is a clash between two men, Harris who wants to rise in class and willing to sell anyone out to do it and Connery whose methods maybe wrong, but has the genuine interest of his fellow miners at heart. After the business in Pennsylvania is concluded and after the action of this film, the real McParlan rose high in the Pinkerton agency, but his name was an anathema among his own people.

    The Molly Maguires is a well crafted piece of cinema that unfortunately failed to find an audience back in 1970. Today it's considered a masterpiece and deservedly so.
    9g-bodyl

    Vastly Underrated Movie!

    The Molly Maguires is a criminally underseen and very underrated film based off some little known history of this great country. This film is all about social justice as the events of the film take place before the time of labor unions as we know them today and in a time where the early unions were frowned upon. But this film does a good job in bringing those issues to light. This film is beautifully shot, is well-acted, and has a great score by Henry Mancini.

    Martin Ritt's film is about the leader of the Molly Maguires named Jack Kehoe, a radical group of Irish American miners who fight against the oppressive mine owners, and his interactions with Pinkerton detective, James McParland who is assigned to go undercover and infiltrate the secret society.

    This film doesn't have a big cast, but it's well-acted. Sean Connery is one of the greatest actors ever and as usual, brings about his A-game as the leader of the Maguires. Richard Harris is also excellent as the low-key detective who sometimes questions his motives. The lovely Samantha Eggar also does a good job as Harris's love interest.

    Overall, The Molly Maguires is a fantastic piece of historical fiction and one that people should learn about. I grew up and went to school in the area, so this film would hold dear to me. I'm very surprised it was a box office failure due to the pedigree of the cast. It talks about a very hectic time in our history and essentially the beginning of labor unions. I rate this film 9/10.

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    Related interests

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    Period Drama
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
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    History

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Most of this movie was shot in Eckley, Pennsylvania. "Paramount Pictures" saved the town from being destroyed. It was slated to be demolished for strip mining, but after the movie was filmed, the town's land was donated to the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. The town is now a museum. Several structures built for the movie still survive.
    • Goofs
      Sean Connery takes out a $1 bill which wasn't printed until 1923. The movie is supposed to take place fifty years earlier.
    • Quotes

      Miss Mary Raines: You heard what the Father said. There's no future for what you joined except hell.

      Detective James McParlan: Well I'm a miner now. I'll be traveling in that direction anyway, just out of habit.

    • Connections
      Edited into Wildside: Delinquency of a Miner (1985)
    • Soundtracks
      Eileen Aroon
      Traditional Irish Song

      Performed by Samantha Eggar (uncredited) and Richard Harris (uncredited)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 24, 1970 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Zaverenici
    • Filming locations
      • Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania, USA
    • Production company
      • Tamm Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $11,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 4m(124 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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