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Director
Steve McQueen
Credits
Producers: Robin Gutch, Laura Hastings-Smith. Writers: Enda Walsh, Steve McQueen
Principal Cast
Michael Fassbender, Liam Cunningham, Stuart Graham
Category
Feature
Turner prize-winning artist Steve McQueen made a shattering entry into feature film-making with this vivid, contentious yet ultimately compassionate study of Bobby Sands’ 1981 hunger strike at the Maze prison. Extensively researched, and co-written by noted Irish playwright Enda Walsh, Hunger is a work of disarming authenticity, unblinking in its depiction of the Republican prisoners’ so-called ‘Dirty Protest’ to win ‘political’ status, the violence meted out by prison officers within the H-Blocks, and, significantly, the off-duty murder of those officers by the IRA. Alongside this in-your-face intensity is an exploration of the wider issues, as the unconventional structure moves from documentary-style introduction to a crucial unbroken 22-minute scene where Sands (Michael Fassbender) sits down with Father Dominic Moran (Liam Cunningham), announces his intention to go on hunger strike and is firmly questioned by the priest over the morality of sacrificing his own life — and indeed the motives for such extreme action. Built on a fearless performance by Fassbender, who underwent supervised weight loss for the role, Hunger is a valuable investigation into this island’s troubled recent past.
Notes by Trevor Johnston.
96 minutes, Ireland/UK, 2008, Colour
ARCHIVE AT LUNCHTIME: MÍ NA GAEILGE (PROGRAMME TWO) 13:00
BLUE ROAD – THE EDNA O’BRIEN STORY 16:10
I’M STILL HERE 15:40, 20:20
INGMAR BERGMAN: AUTUMN SONATA 18.30
MICKEY 17 13:00, 20:30
O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU? 18.00
SISTER MIDNIGHT 13:50, 18:20 (OC)
THE IRISH QUESTION 15:50, 20:40
VERMIGLIO 13:10
The IFI is supported by The Arts Council