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Director
Deborah Warner
Credits
Producer: Yvonne Thunder. Writer: Elizabeth Bowen, John Banville
Principal Cast
Keeley Hawes, Michael Gambon, David Tennant, Maggie Smith, Fiona Shaw
Category
FeatureLiterature
Much celebrated theatrical director Deborah Warner made the transition to feature film here with this lushly-filmed adaptation of Elizabeth Bowen’s novel of the same name, in a depiction of love blooming amidst social collapse. Set during the Irish War of Independence in the 1920s, The Last September concerns itself with Lois (Keeley Hawes), a young Anglo-Irish girl whose rebellious spirit causes her to reject respectable British soldier Gerald’s (David Tennant) love for her. Instead it is Peter, an IRA soldier sheltering in the grounds of her home, who wins her attraction; the impossibility of such a romance at a time when the IRA where driving the Anglo-Irish out of their homes, however, escapes Lois. The film’s wealth of talent – Maggie Smith, Michael Gambon, and Fiona Shaw all appear as members of the Anglo-Irish – helps bring alive the poetry of a work by one of Ireland’s finest twentieth century novelists.
103 minutes, Ireland/UK/France, 1999, Colour
A COMPLETE UNKNOWN 15:10, 18:00
A REAL PAIN 12:20, 16:20
KNEECAP 20:55
MARIA 12:30, 18:20
PRESENCE 12:30, 14:20, 20:50
THE BRUTALIST (70MM) 14:30, 19:00
The IFI is supported by The Arts Council