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Tag Archives: Brute Force (1947)
Hunger and other films about doing time
I haven’t spent a lot of time in prisons and don’t want to. But I won’t deny they make tremendous story settings.
This was brought home to me again over the weekend after watching Hunger, Steve McQueen’s 2008 depiction of the final months in the life of IRA militant Bobby Sands. Sands and 9 other IRA inmates staved themselves to death in 1981 in protest against the Thatcher government’s insistence of treating them as common criminals rather than political prisoners.
I recently reviewed Adrian McKinty’s book The Cold Cold Ground, which dealt with a Catholic cop in a Protestant neighbourhood trying to solve a murder against the backdrop of the civil unrest unleashed by the hunger strikes.
Hunger is about what happened inside the walls of the Maze Prison. It’s a visceral, blistering film, all the more so because it’s made with incredible slight of hand.
It opens with the arresting image of a pair of bloody knuckles being soaked in water. These belong to one of the prison guards and were acquired administering incredibly savage beatings to IRA prisoners in response to their “blanket and dirty protests” in which the prisoners refused to wash and smeared shit over the walls of their prison cells. The guard is subsequently murdered in the aged care home where his mother lives, one of 16 guards killed by paramilitaries in retaliation for the treatment of the prisoners.… Read more
Posted in 1960s American crime films, 1970s American crime films, 1980s American crime films, Adrian McKinty, Australian crime film, Bryan Brown, Burt Lancaster, Film Noir, James Woods, Michael Fassbender, Stuart Rosenberg
Tagged A Prophet (2002), Adrian Mckinty, Alan Parker, Big Doll House (1971), Brute Force (1947), Burt Lancaster, Caged (1950) Agnes Morehead, Christopher Dale Flannery, Cold Ground, Cool Hand Luke (1967), Ernest Brawley, Everynight... Everynight (1994), Fast Walking (1982), Ghosts of the Civil Dead (1988), Hunger (2008), Jackson County Jail (1976), Jacques Audiard, James Woods, McVicar (1980), Michael Fassbender, Midnight Express (1980), Night and the City (1950), prison films, Steve McQueen, Stir (1980), Stuart Rosenberg, The Cold, The Rap, Thieves Highway (1949)