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Borstal Boy Movie Review

Borstal Boy Review

"Borstal Boy" Overview

**** stars

Rating: NR
2000

Cast and Crew

Director : Peter Sheridan
Producer : Pat Moylan,Arthur Lappin,Nye Heron
Screenwiter : Nye Heron,Peter Sheridan
Starring : Shawn Hatosy,Danny Dyer,Michael York,Eva Birthistle,Robin Laing

Irish filmmaking has always resonated with an urgent sense of political forethought. Filmmaker Jim Sheridan diligently championed the determined spirit of tortured protagonists in gutsy pictures such as My Left Foot, The Boxer, and In the Name of the Father. In the uplifting Emerald Isle melodrama Borstal Boy, Jim’s brother Peter Sheridan effectively explores the trials and tribulations of a 16-year old boy’s exploits behind the unbearable confines of a British World War II borstal, a reformatory center for boys, based on charismatic Irish writer Brendan Behan’s memoir. Provocative and resoundingly crafty, Borstal Boy is a solid and refined piece of moviemaking imbued with passion and attitude.

Thanks to his heavy involvement in IRA-related activities, the film opens with Brendan (Shawn Hatosy, Anywhere But Here, John Q) in jail in East Anglia, England. Among the prison-camp personalities that the overwhelmed Brendan encounters are a thieving gay sailor named Millwall (Danny Dyer), whom he eventually. He also finds a love interest in the lovely and supportive Liz (Eva Birthistle), who happens to be the daughter of the facility’s presiding Governor (Michael York). Consequently, Brendan begins to shape his outlook on life, challenging what was once a rigid belief system entrenched in his conservative shell.

Borstal Boy, gallantly written by Nye Heron and director Sheridan, is masterfully shot courtesy of Ciaran Tanham’s active camera, capturing the taut and stylish feel of the film. Hatosy adds a touch of mischievousness and scruffy bewilderment as the soul-searching, stuttering rogue. And especially memorable is Dyer’s gay sailor with whom Brendan finds an attraction: gently funny, complex, and ambiguously disturbing.

The recurring theme, appropriately so, suggests that Brendan Behan may be the contemporary of another tortured creative homosexual Irish icon—the legendary Oscar Wilde. Refreshingly stark in its cavorting homoeroticism, Borstal Boy is a stimulating tale that recalls the adventurous antics of an Irish literary figurehead who engaged in a colorful and carousing existence during tremendous, trying times.


Reviewer: Frank Ochieng


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posted on 07/05/2006 16:11


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Borstal Boy is a great movie. I've watched it 5 times now, and could watch it again today. Shawn Hatosy does a good job as Brendan Behan, and Danny Dyer was magnificent. Eva Birthistle is remarkable as Liz Joyce. Brendan Behan was only 16 when he was put into that boy's prison (called Borstals), and Charlie Millwall was 17. We often forget that Romeo and Juliet were 17 and 14 respectively. Great loves often happen at that age, and I believe Brendan and Charlie's did. I'd be willing to bet that Brendan Behan loved Charlie as long as he lived, even though he lost him to the war so early in his life. He went on to marry and had children, but a man's first love is with him to the end. There were some coincidences in the movie that tended to kick you in the teeth, but all in all, it was a great movie. It always amuses me when screenwriters stick a female love interest into a movie when nothing like that existed in the book. Still and all, I have no doubt that Brendan Behan was bisexual, and Eva Birthistle plays Liz Joyce so well that I didn't mind the change there. In any case, this is a great movie and I'd recommend it to anyone. It has a poignancy and validity that you seldom see in movies about young people, even ones who have lived such a nitty gritty existence, and especially in that time of war when England was standing, back to the wall, fighting desperately to stave off the Nazi menace. Charlie's ship was actually sunk in the staits of Gibralter, and I wondered why the change, but that's a minor thing. In some ways this movie reminded me of "A Home At The End Of The World", although it was even more poignant. See this movie. You won't be sorry.





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