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Kings (2007)

Director: Tom Collins

4
Average user rating
8 reviews

Movie review

From Time Out Chicago

This melancholy, whiskey-soaked dialogue-fest is adapted from a play (Jimmy Murphy’s The Kings of the Kilburn High Road), and at times you can almost hear writer and director Collins straining to open it up with multiple locations and flashbacks. The action takes place over the course of one day, as five middle-aged Irish immigrants who have been living in England for decades gather for the funeral and wake of a friend. Jap (O’Kelly) and Git (Conroy) are chronic drunks, far enough along that Git pawns his father’s watch to buy booze. Máirtín (Barnes) is trying to dry out to save his marriage, but is sorely tempted by the wake. Joe (Meaney) has built a thriving construction company, but only by ditching his friends completely. And Shay (Crowley) has found a middle road, working as a green-grocer while trying to play peacemaker to his bickering old pals.

Despite the flashbacks, this film still feels like a night at the theater, for better and for worse. The emotional moments and revelations arrive with the regularity of the next round of drinks, and it would take a fool not to see the big, painful twists. Nevertheless, this kind of script lives or dies by the strength of the cast, and this ensemble sells every moment. It’s enjoyable as a film, even if we wish we could have seen this cast do it onstage.

Author: Hank Sartin 2008-04-03 00:07:27

Time Out Chicago Issue 162: April 3–9, 2008


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User reviews of this film

  • hector said...
    Posted on Sep 19 2008 16:11 DVd out on Amazon. xxxxx
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  • Elizabeth said...
    Posted on Sep 09 2008 08:37 Is this film out on DVd. I missed it. I hear its very good.
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  • Pot boiler said...
    Posted on Sep 09 2008 08:35 A beautifully-made film, "Kings" is one of the best movies of this year. The hand-held camera gives it an intimacy too often absent in close-up cinematic portraiture, and allows the viewer a real look at the shocking sadness of the lives of its subjects. Of a group of five friends who leave the west of Ireland in their teens in the late 1970s, Jackie is the first to die. Herein begins a long journey into oblivion for his four friends, all of them living lives very different from what was envisaged at the start of their English odyssey. What "Kings" does, more than anything, is take a long look at the generations of lost Irish in London, those who left Ireland on the boat to work on the building sites and to clean houses, and the sad waste of the loss of potential to the devils of booze. The films stays away from nostaglia or sentiment, and in doing so it creates for the viewer a real picture of how it was for all the thousands of immigrants, most of whom never saw home again. Is the film coming out on DVD?
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  • jane Toronto Film Festiva said...
    Posted on Aug 26 2008 16:24 It is possible that the major narrative of the twenty-first century will be that of immigration. With transnational movement becoming ever more common, the distances between us shrink both geographically and socially as every immigrant has a compelling individual story to share. Kings is the fertile ground where six of these stories take root, grow and intertwine. It is the first major bilingual (Irish Gaelic and English) Irish production.
    In the seventies, six ambitious and energetic young men – friends and relatives – left Ireland for London with an eye to making their fortunes and eventually returning home in a blaze of glory. Like so many before them, they found work in the construction industry, toiling to build the very cities that often remained cold and unwelcoming to them. When we meet the men, it is nearly thirty years after their arrival, and one of them has died under terrible circumstances.
    It is a deeply held tradition that they hold a wake for the passing of their friend, named Jackie. What makes this occasion even more tearful is that the friends haven't followed the path they originally had set out for themselves. They have not enjoyed the same fortunes or even returned to Ireland victoriously as planned. When they finally meet to honour Jackie, drink and sadness make it inevitable that some men will take up the grievances and disappointments of the past, all the while maintaining the illusion that they have a future. In tragic situations like these, nostalgia is particularly far from the cold, hard truth.
    In addition to sketching a fine sense of place, director Tom Collins elicits remarkable performances from each member of his strong cast, particularly the great Colm Meaney as Joe, a man who left behind his old Irish life for good, but at a heavy cost. These skillful actors capture all the complex and heart-rending subtleties of the immigrant experience. Through the bonds and misfires of male friendship, Kings sympathetically portrays a circle who never actually leave their homeland in either custom or commitment.
    Jane Schoettle Toronto Film Festival
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  • Jay said...
    Posted on Aug 25 2008 07:05 IMDB - Kings is a very fine film. It is a haunting, melancholic portrait of lost souls, the people on our streets who once belonged to some place, somewhere in another time, but who have fallen out of touch with the world around them. Director Tom Collins seizes on this feeling of loneliness and misplacement and forces us to confront it, as we immerse ourselves in the lives of Git, Jap, Máirtín, Shay and Joe. The haunting, ghostly memory of Jackie makes us also mourn his passing, as he appears to his friends between sleeping and waking, between day and night.
    Indeed the film itself feels caught in time between dusk and dawn, as the characters let the world pass by in the final third of the film, when an ominous, creeping awareness invades on their drunken reverie. The atmosphere is one of a suspended moment – the group of friends toast their lost companion in an eerie, empty back room, whilst muffled noise just creeps in from the bar outside. The Irish language they speak amongst themselves reflects the otherness of their lives, their misplacement in this world. As they leave and come back, it is as if they move from one world to the other, and when they finally go, they could be gone forever.
    With excellent performances and a taut script, the evocative cinematography and soundtrack make this an achingly sad and beautiful work that is timeless in it's relevance.
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  • Sean Maguire said...
    Posted on Aug 25 2008 07:03 Kings contains the best acting I have seen in an Irish film in many years. It is a reworking of a play, and the adaptation preserves all the intensity and intimacy which is usual within a theatre production. It is a dark, brooding and menacing work which does not belong in the category of light entertainment, but rather, a higher art. If you are prepared to go on the journey, you will find it has rewards. But be warned that there is no compromise here to easy access for English only speakers - it is predominantly in Irish with English subtitles. If you like the theatre, you should find this a real treat. Forget Hollywood, or indeed Fair City, this contains the best ensemble acting by an Irish cast since the best of the Roddy Doyle films.
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  • Bronagh said...
    Posted on Jul 18 2008 11:05 me toooooooooooo. Slan Libh.
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  • john said...
    Posted on Jul 18 2008 11:03 Well I thought it was great !
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Cast & crew

Director: Tom Collins

Cast: Colm Meaney, Donal O'Kelly, Brendan Conroy, Barry Barnes, Donncha Crowley full cast

Rated: NR

Duration: 88 mins

US Release: Apr 4 2008




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