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Angel

Ireland, United Kingdom

1982

92 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 2.9/5 Stars.
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DIR Neil Jordan

EXEC John Boorman

PROD Barry Blackmore

SCR Neil Jordan

DP Chris Menges

CAST Stephen Rea, Veronica Quilligan, Alan Devlin, Peter Caffrey, Honor Heffernan, Donal McCann, Ray McAnally, Marie Kean, Gerard McSorley

ED J. Patrick Duffner

PROD DES John Lucas

MUSIC Keith Donald

SOUND Kieran Horgan

Synopsis

Saxophonist Danny witnesses the murder of a deaf-mute girl. Questioned by the police, he remembers only the orthopedic shoes of the killers’ leader. So begins his quest to avenge her. He seeks an answer to the simple question ‘Why?’ but finds only more and deeper questions, which resonate with the wider context of ‘the Troubles’, the inter-communal strife gripping the modern-day Northern Ireland, which is the film’s setting. —IMDb

Director

Original

Neil Jordan

One of Ireland’s most celebrated directors, Neil Jordan has made his name directing moody, often politically charged films that focus largely on themes of love, betrayal, and the darker realms of the human psyche. Born February 25, 1950, in Sligo County, Ireland, Jordan began his career as an acclaimed fiction writer. He entered the film industry in 1981 as a script consultant on John Boorman’s Excalibur, and subsequently made a documentary about the making of the film. After scripting another film, Traveller, Jordan wrote and directed his first film, the stylish 1982 crime drama Angel. Starring Stephen Rea as a saxophone player who witnesses a series of brutal murders, it explored the darker, violent impulses of the human mind, a theme that Jordan would revisit time and again in his later films. After attracting his first wave of international recognition for In the Company of Wolves (1984), his horror-tinged retelling of the Little Red Riding Hood tale, Jordan had his first real success… read more

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Lights in the Dusk

20Sep11

A film-noir closer in style to the television work of Alan Clarke. Slight shades of Tarkovsky and Antonioni jar against a grittier social-realist approach. Genuinely surreal moments, like the concert in the mental institution and the closing shot, with the scattered pages and the sound of a helicopter appearing out of nowhere, suggests the same subtle dream-logic that would develop in Jordan's subsequent work.

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