Small Things Like These

GoMovieReviews Rating: ★★★Small Things Like These

Rated: M

Directed by: Tim Mielants

Based on the Novel Written by: Claire Keegan

Produced by: Cillian Murphy, Matt Damon, Catherine Magee, Alan Moloney, Drew Vinton, Jeff Robinov

Starring: Cillian Murphy, Emily Watson, Eileen Walsh, Michelle Fairly, Clare Dunne, Zara Devlin.

‘Don’t you ever question it?’

Small Things Like These is about the open secret of young women held in a convent to work as they rehabilitate after conceiving a child out of wedlock.

The girls have to give up their baby’s then work in the convent like prisoners for their sins.

The film is shot from the perspective of Bill Furlong (Cillian Murphy).  A father of five daughters and the son of an unwed mother.

It’s 1985.

Bill wakes at dawn to shovel coal.

A church bell rings through the pre-dawn darkness.

A dog barks, crows caw, as the grey day begins in the small town of New Ross, Ireland.

The boys in the town chop wood or work for Bill, shovelling coal.

It’s a community that eats dinner together at the pub.

Bill drives a truck around to deliver coal.  And that’s when he sees her (Zara Devlin).  From the shadows.  A girl crying, wanting to get away.

She doesn’t want to go into the convent.

This is a quiet film.  There’s no soundtrack.  Just the sound of rain as Bill gets up in the night to watch the world through a window, or the sound of a running tap as he washes the coal dust from his hands before greeting his family around the dinner table.

Bill flashes back to his childhood, his mother.

Seeing the girl not wanting to go into the convent brings it all back.

His wife (Eileen Walsh) knows something’s wrong, asking why he’s so quiet.

‘Don’t you ever question it?’  He asks.

But it’s none of their business.  It’s not their girls who are in trouble.

Bill worries.

And it’s strange because the film’s about the girls in the convent but the story of the girls is hidden.  Just a glimpse of the young girl who manages to escape, only to be taken back to the convent again.

This is more the reaction of Bill seeing what’s going on.  Of questioning the control the catholic church has over the town which is why the town doesn’t question the punishment.

And although hidden, secret and quiet, the film is captivating, the feeling from Bill pulling the story along and the camerawork telling the story as it follows this character experiencing deeply shifting emotions:

The window;

The shot behind the truck’s cabin;

The slow movement through a kitchen to see outside to a mother;

The snow falling with a stoic unmoving tree in view.

There’s a powerlessness in the community.  Families are poor, struggling to pay for Christmas.  But there’s power in feeling what’s right and what’s wrong.

Small Things Like These isn’t a tearjerker, more an emotional undercurrent that shifts into a wave to build into an act of kindness.

A quality slow burn.

Herself

Rated: MA 15+Herself

Directed by: Phyllida Lloyd

Written by: Malcolm Campbell, Clare Dunne

Produced by: Sharon Horgan, Ed Guiney, Rory Gilmartin

Starring: Clare Dunne, Harriet Walter, Conleth Hill, Ian Lloyd Anderson.

‘I miss him. I don’t mean him, I mean who he was. I want to fix it.’

This is just one of the many heartbreaking tests to her resolve that a woman must face when she flees her home and her partner to protect herself and her children.

On one level, Herself is a subtle game of cat and mouse between husband and wife (especially on
the husband’s side).

While his character operates mostly from behind the scenes, the escalation of
the husband’s machinations asks whether this is a man sinking into the depths his own desperation
or a monster gradually revealing himself.

At the same time his wife is discovering both the depths and the heights of what she will do to take care of her children.

The film opens on three silhouetted figures and the sounds of children giggling. Two young girls are
inexpertly applying makeup to their mother’s face. Beneath her right eye is a distinctive birthmark,
from a distance it could almost be a black eye, but Sandra (Clare Dunne) asks her daughters not to
cover it up and she relates a sweet story to Emily and Molly about how it makes her special.

Later that afternoon when Gary (Ian Lloyd Anderson) arrives home from work his daughters run to
him, still giggling. This man is clearly not a monster. That is, until he sends his daughters out into the
garden. Gary has found some cash that Sandra had hidden and he fears that she could use the
money to leave him. He wants to make her stay, but what he does next is the very thing that will
ensure that Sandra does leave, however reluctant she may have been to take such a vast step into
the unknown.

As it is, Sandra and her daughters find themselves crammed into a tiny room at an airport hotel and
Gary is forced to move back in with his parents. Although Sandra and the girls adapt to their new
situation, using the airport car park as their own roller skating rink, it’s not a long term solution. But
Sandra cannot go back. Nor can she find her girls a permanent home. Like many parts of the western
world prior to the pandemic, Sandra endures long queues for rental properties that are ultimately
unattainable.

It is not until she is snuggled up with the girls one night and her eldest, Emily, relates a
story that she had heard in class that Sandra lights upon a solution.

She will build her own house.

It’s an unlikely undertaking for a single mother working two low paid jobs and not a single skill related to carpentry or building but, as it turns out, it’s still more likely than finding a rental.

However, trouble is brewing in the wings. When he cannot bribe his girls and he fails to persuade
Sandra to come back to him, Gary resorts to guilt trips and manipulation, and finally he turns to
force. This time, using the courts as his bludgeon.

For once, Sandra is intimidated. She is so fearful that she is even prepared to cover up her birthmark,
if that will help to convince the court that she is a responsible and capable mother.

An engaging cast takes this conversation we as a society must have and raises it to a warm and
engrossing story; even as, at the same time, it is a realistic depiction of the tug of longing, the
practical difficulties, the uncertainty and the disruption to their lives that women and children must
endure when they are forced to abandon their home.

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