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Orphans

United Kingdom

1998

101 Min
Color
1.85:1
English
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
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DIR Peter Mullan

EXEC Paddy Higson

PROD Frances Higson

SCR Peter Mullan

DP Grant Cameron

CAST Douglas Henshall, Gary Lewis, Rosemarie Stevenson, Stephen McCole, Ann Swan, Gilbert Martin, Jan Wilson, Lenny Mullan, Malcolm Shields, June Brogan, Paul Doonan, Linda Cuthbert

ED Colin Monie

PROD DES Campbell Gordon

MUSIC Craig Armstrong

SOUND Peter Brill

Edinburgh, Venice (Critics' Week): Kodak Award, Athens

Synopsis

Four grown up children come together the night before the funeral of their mother in Glasgow. While Thomas sings a tribute in the local pub, a fight breaks out and Michael is stabbed. John wants to avenge his brother, while Thomas goes to chapel with his sister Sheila for an all-night vigil. Even here, though, is not safe, as a storm tears the roof from the church. Each sibling must find their own way to come to terms with their grief during a turbulent long, dark night of mishaps and misunderstandings. After an emotional and traumatic night, the siblings eventually reunite in grief. –Inbaseline

Director

Original

Peter Mullan

Rejected by the National Film School, compact, ginger-haired Scotsman Peter Mullan abandoned his hope of being a film director and opted for the life of a drama teacher instead. After finally outgrowing (at the age of 27) a tendency for self-destructively working himself to exhaustion, which had landed him in the hospital again and again, he made his professional acting debut in the Wildcat Theatre Company’s 1988 Christmas pantomime. More stage work followed, as did film roles in “The Big Man” and Ken Loach’s “Riff-Raff” (both 1990), and by 1994 he was playing a featured role as a thug in Danny Boyle’s “Shallow Grave” and exploring his own filmmaking voice with the short “Close” (thanks to money from Scottish TV). At the precise time the Scottish film industry was starting to take off, Mullan found himself in just the right place, acting in “Braveheart” (1995) as the soldier who says that Mel Gibson is not tall enough to be William Wallace and portraying the dealer who supplies the… read more

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LaHaine

4Aug12

Great debut effort from actor/director Peter Mullan, sadly overlooked and hasn't got enough credit as its a pretty fine film.

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