Circle of Friends Movie Review
Circle of Friends Review
"Circle of Friends" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Pat O'ConnorProducer : Frank Price,Arlene Sellers,Alex Winitsky
Screenwiter : Andrew Davies
Starring : Chris O'Donnell,Minnie Driver,Geraldine O'Rawe,Saffron Burrows,Alan Cumming,Colin Firth,Aidan Gillen
Circle of Friends is the story of three Irish teenage girls, Eve, Nan, and
Benny, and their respective quests for love. In 1957 Dublin and nearby
Knockglen, we return to a time before the world lost its innocence, before our
uncontrollable obsession with physical beauty took hold, and before we had any
idea about how a relationship was supposed to work.
As the story opens, the three characters are entering their freshmen year at a
Dublin college. Eve (Geraldine O'Rawe) is an orphan, living with the nuns in a
convent. Nan (Saffron Burrows) is a gorgeous and wicked socialite with
ulterior motives. And Benny (Minnie Driver) is a Plain Jane heroine, plagued
by overbearing parents and a trollish suitor (Cumming), and is still trying to
overcome her adolescent awkwardness. Chris O'Donnell plays Jack, "the cutest
boy in school" who becomes the eventual point of contention in the story,
developing a deep love for Benny, but perpetually confused and torn between
those competing for his affections and attempts to control his future.
Overflowing with sexual tension and overtones, Circle of Friends pits against
each other the issues of religion and personal freedom, family and love, wealth
and happiness. Predictably, it lands on the more modern and liberated
viewpoints regarding these issues, and in the end, everything neatly ties up
into a rather typical coming-of-age story that we've seen countless times
before. I was expecting something a little more original like Dead Poets
Society, but ended up getting another reworking of an old story.
Excellent acting by all the players and the film's unique change of setting
make Circle of Friends a worthwhile picture, but it suffers from a painfully
slow pace and no real originality in its message. If you go, bring a date and
a box of tissues.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





