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poster of Small Things Like These
Rating: 7.122/10 by 41 users

Small Things Like These (2024)

While working as a coal merchant to support his family, Bill Furlong discovers disturbing secrets kept by the local convent and uncovers truths of his own; forcing him to confront his past and the complicit silence of a small Irish town controlled by the Catholic Church.

Directing:
  • Tanya Rosen
  • Daire Glynn
  • Áine Máire Ní Tháibhís
  • Tim Mielants
Writing:
  • Enda Walsh
  • Claire Keegan
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Nov 01, 2024

Rating: 7.122/10 by 41 users

Alternative Title:
Kleine Dinge wie diese - DE
דברים קטנים כאלה - IL
Piccole cose come queste - IT

Country:
Belgium
Ireland
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 39 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $6,847,510

Plot Keyword: based on novel or book, 1980s, magdalene asylum

Cillian Murphy
Bill Furlong
Emily Watson
Sister Mary
Eileen Walsh
Eileen Furlong
Zara Devlin
Sarah Redmond
Clare Dunne
Sister Carmel
Helen Behan
Mrs. Kehoe
Ella Cannon
Laundry Girl
Sarah Morris
Sarah's Mother
Cillian O'Gairbhi
Sarah's Father
Tadhg Moloney
Diarmuid Sinnott
Liadán Dunlea
Kathleen Furlong
Giulia Doherty
Joan Furlong
Rachel Lynch
Sheila Furlong
Aoife Gaffney
Grace Furlong
Faye Brazil
Loretta Furlong
Agnes O'Casey
Sarah Furlong
Louis Kirwan
Young Bill Furlong
Mark McKenna
Younger Ned
Clare Dunne
Sr. Carmel
Joanne Crawford
Norma Sinnott
Aidan O'Hare
Mick Sinnott
Ryan Waters
Young Boy Drinking Milk
Vega Farrelly
Little girl with Emma
Ella Cannon
Laundry Girl (uncredited)
Tom Leavey
Pub Goer (uncredited)
John McCarthy
Father with Boy (uncredited)

r96sk

'Small Things Like These' is absorbing. I basically got exactly what I expected from this one. It's a slow burn, quiet film featuring a stellar, if somewhat understated, Cillian Murphy performance. The pacing is spot on and the story is undoubtedly engrossing, it's one that holds plenty of emotion behind it. It does conclude rather abruptly, I in fact overheard someone nearby remark "that can't be it" when the cut to black happens. That isn't, for me anyway, a bad thing though. Again, I kinda anticipated it being a movie that would simply tell its tale and end, which is certainly what it does. It is very much Murphy that stands out from these 98 minutes, but credit is still due for the likes of Eileen Walsh, Emily Watson and Zara Devlin in their respective supporting roles. No-one onscreen puts a foot wrong. All in all, it's evidently a supremely well made picture - one I'd recommend!

CinemaSerf

A friend of mine used to own a big gay bar in Dublin, and I recall being in it the day that marriage was legalised in Eire. One of the women celebrating was telling us of her childhood at the hands of the nuns in the 1970s. It was a ghastly story of women who hadn't an ounce of compassion between them all, and this film picks up that cudgel and swings it squarely at what it is little better than a religious equivalent of a Dickensian workhouse. The story is told from the perspective of local coal merchant "Bill" (Cillian Murphy) who lives with his wife and five daughters in a small town in Co. Wexford. Nobody has much money and some are reduced to gathering wood from the forest floor to heat their homes. By comparison, his family are quite well off and with Christmas looming all are anticipating a good family time. He supplies the local convent-cum-orphanage where the unwed girls of the community are deposited when they get in the family way, and it's here that he encounters a young lass locked in the coal shed. Freezing and terrified, he wonders how she got herself trapped in there - and that's where the story starts to focus on not just the inhumanity that prevailed, but on the internecine, web-like, tendrils of a church that brooked no resistance or interference. If you want a "peaceable life" then you'd best leave well alone. Can he, though? He is frequently reminded of his own childhood. One of tragedy, kindness, an hot water bottle and a jigsaw puzzle. "Bill" is a troubled man who has much to mull over as his conscience refuses to accept the societal compromises even his wife (Eileen Walsh) might prefer he adopt in the face of what he has now witnessed. This is definitely a less-is-more film, with an effective paucity of dialogue and a sense of oppressiveness that frequently overwhelms with it's simplicity. The setting demonstrates a degree of menace way more poignantly than any horror film, but horror this is - and an illustration of cruelty in it's most devastatingly subtle form. Murphy shines here, his performance allows his character to take us with him as we all observe a scenario unfold that might not have been out of place in 1885 - but in 1985? Not an easy watch, but well worth ninety minutes of your time.


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