This is our next film. I'm really looking forward to it as we started watching it at home but it was late and managed to miss the second part. Fortunately we have now scheduled it for later this week.
Here are my notes:
A young Irish woman
Ellis Lacey (Saoirse Ronan) emigrates to New York City in search of a better
life. Initially homesick, she begins to adjust to her new surroundings with the
help of Italian-American Tony Fiorello (Emory Cohen) with whom she becomes
romantically involved. A family crisis then compels Ellis to return to Ireland
where she meets Jim Farrell (Domhnall Gleeson), and as a result she has to
choose between two countries and the different lives they offer her.
Here are my notes:
Brooklyn
UK 2015 112
minutes
Director: John
Crowley
Starring: Saoirse Ronan, Emory
Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters
Awards
and Nominations
- Nominated
for three Oscars (Best Picture, Best Actress (Saoirse Ronan) and Best Adapted
Screenplay (Nick Hornby))
- Won
BAFTA for Best British Film and five further BAFTA nominations including
Best Actress, Best Supporting Actress (Julie Walters), Best Adapted
Screenplay
- A
further 29 wins and 136 nominations
Mark Kermode
Producer Finola Dyer read
Brooklyn, the award-winning novel by
Colm Toibin, after completing her work on An
Education (2009). She felt that its story spoke to her on a personal level
as her mother had emigrated from Ireland in the 1950s, and having met Toibin through
a mutual friend he immediately granted her the film rights. Nick Hornby had
produced the Oscar nominated screenplay for An
Education and Dyer commissioned him to adapt Brooklyn for the screen.
Director John Crowley
had read the book on its publication and agreed to take on the project after
reading just 40 pages of Nick Hornby’s script. Crowley had himself emigrated
from Ireland to London in his 20s and this was one of his main reasons for
deciding to make the film. In an interview on its release he said he:
“…had
emotional understanding from experience that could maybe help make this film
not a period piece frozen in aspic, but could give it a directness that would
resonate with a younger audience anywhere.”
At its premier at the
Sundance Film Festival the film received a standing ovation and great critical
acclaim, subsequently confirmed by the success of the film in the awards season.
Following a bidding war for its distribution rights the film was released
globally and to date has taken USD 62.1 million against its budget of USD 11.0
million.
After beginning his career
directing stage plays in Dublin John Crowley made his name in the UK as an associate
director at the Donmar Warehouse in London where he directed a filmed version
of a short stage play by Samuel Beckett. He has subsequently worked extensively
in theatre both in the UK and on Broadway. He made his feature film debut with Intermission (2003), a comedy drama set
in Dublin and in 2007 won a BAFTA for Best Director for his film Boy A (made for TV in the UK but given
cinematic release in the US).
It has recently been
announced that Crowley will direct the film version of Donna Tartt’s Pulitzer
Prize-winning novel The Goldfinch.
Here's the trailer: