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Inside I'm Dancing (2004)
Director: Damien O'Donnell
Movie review
From Time Out London
It’s refreshing to find two disabled, wheelchair-bound characters heading up a film intended for a mass audience. Sadly, it’s less edifying to find them at the helm of such a barely credible, if well-meaning, crowd-pleaser as this Dublin-based story from the director of ‘East Is East’ and the much less successful ‘Heartlands’.Two young men are our focus: Michael (a very good Steven Robertson) is quiet, tolerant and has cerebral palsy, while Rory (an equally good James McAvoy) is more combative, energetic and has Duchenne muscular dystrophy, which dramatically shortens his life expectancy. The two meet at a dreary residential care home, where a noisy, rebellious Rory takes it upon himself to challenge Michael’s passive take on life. Soon – and for reasons difficult to believe – both are living together independently under the caring eye of their friend Siobhán (Romola Garai), on whom Michael has a complicating, unrequited crush. Rory struggles to boost Michael’s confidence and career prospects, all the while ignoring his own problems and impending poor health.
O’Donnell admirably tries to avoid the trap of numerous screen portraits of disabled people as latent superheroes or suppressed angels, yet the film’s failure is in the plotting. Too often, I wanted to scream foul as the story took a convenient swing one way or the other, expecting our emotions to lurch with it and its clumsily declared, hands-in-the-air celebration of what O’Donnell and crew perceive as the independent spirit. Full marks for intent; barely a pass for execution.
Author: DC
Time Out London Issue 1782: October 13-20, 2004
User reviews of this film
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- Yardena said...
- Posted on Jun 21 2011 23:05 I wish there were more films that looked at all forms of disability - which would then lead to more people having a better understanding (speaking as someone with a "physical disability")
- Report as inappropriate
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- marty said...
- Posted on Dec 10 2007 04:50 I loved this film and was the first James Macavoy film I ever had the pleasure of watching, he did a great job with his character and showed us the frustration of yarning for independence and not being judged to be able to handle the independence
- Report as inappropriate
Cast & crew
Director: Damien O'Donnell
Cast: James McAvoy, Steven Robertson, Romola Garai, Tom Hickey, Gerard McSorley, Brenda Fricker
Genre(s): Drama
Rated: 15
Duration: 104 mins
UK Release: Oct 15 2004
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