Intermission Movie Review
Intermission Review

"Intermission" Overview

Rating: R
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : John CrowleyProducer : Neil Jordan,Alan Moloney,Stephen Woolley
Screenwiter : Mark O’Rowe
Starring : Cillian Murphy,Kelly Macdonald,Colin Farrell,Colm Meany,Shirley Henderson
Intermission, a gritty ensemble comedy about a bunch of gritty Irish folk,
bears some resemblance to late-nineties indie crimedies like Trainspotting, Go,
and Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels, and fans of those movies should
certainly check this one out—it’s practically made for those “if you liked
[that], check out [this]” shelves at the video store.
What Intermission resembles just as handily, though, is an Irish Love Actually,
which is to say it’s like Love Actually with a lot more drinking and violence.
This is unlikely to placate anyone who truly hated Love Actually and, as such,
would require something on the order of a soccer riot to feel fully cleansed.
But if you (like me) merely thought a few of those charmingly stammering
Englishmen could use a good deck, Intermission is the punch-throwing,
rock-chucking romantic comedy for you.
Yes, romantic comedy. The occasion for this low-key mayhem is, in most cases,
loneliness. John (Cillian Murphy) breaks up with Deirdre (Kelly Macdonald), who
takes up with Sam (Michael McElhatton), an older man who has left his wife
Noeleen (Deirdre O'Kane), who seeks to feel attractive again. Also, Deirdre’s
sister Sally (the appealingly surly Shirley Henderson) is depressed after her
last relationship ended horribly (naturally, it sounds sort of hilarious when
we hear about it secondhand), and defiantly nurses her growing facial hair.
Explaining the ins and outs of these relationships (and there are several
characters I haven’t mentioned), I’m at a loss as how for how to account for
the subplot about a blowhard cop (dependably unlikable Colm Meaney) and the
ambitious TV producer (Tom O'Sullivan) striking an awkward alliance. It’s a
useful means of tying these storylines together, I suppose, and provides some
chuckles, but its lack of thematic connection to the rest of material, and its
minor (yet heavy-handed) satire of television documentaries bear little
post-movie scrutiny.
A lot of Intermission is like that: Entertaining as it goes along, leaving you
wanting more of this (the offbeat, offhand humor), less of that (the male
characters’ haplessness), satisfied but not elated. Yet strictly in terms of
storytelling, the constant cross-cutting works; you’re out the door before you
have much of a chance to suss out which subplots didn’t pay off.
Accordingly, it’s hard to tell how much of the picture’s considerable charm is
based in shrewd organization by newcomer John Crowley or just an eye for
casting; Cillian Murphy (28 Days Later) and Kelly Macdonald aren’t playing
particularly likable or interesting characters, but we like them anyway. Mark
O'Rowe’s script is generous with funny details, like the way the contents of a
botched petty theft quietly turn into a minor culinary trend. And I’m grateful
to the filmmakers for not creating any of the precious small-town eccentrics
that so many post-Waking Ned Devine British comedies cling to for dear life.
Which reminds me: Colin Farrell is in this, too, returning to his native
Ireland with gusto as Lehiff, a petty, heartless crook with ties to several of
the main characters. Farrell has no trouble with the kinds of roles Tom Cruise
used to take in the eighties, but he’s a lot more fun on the opposite side of
the law. Adorned with gold chains and looking like he tore his sweater from
Bill Cosby’s back, Farrell muscles through Intermission as the movie’s loveless
id, the only character without any sort of maudlin streak. His Lehiff isn’t as
frightening or funny as, say, Trainspotting’s irrepressibly psychotic Begbie,
but he gets the movie’s first—and possibly its most memorable—scene all to
himself. From that propulsive opening to his goofy crooning of “I Fought the
Law” over the closing credits (it’s also on the soundtrack), Farrell chases his
heroic roles out of the room -- and the twee out of Ireland.
Up the beatdown on DVD, with deleted scenes rounding out the disc.
Time out... for a Harp!
Reviewer: Jesse Hassenger





