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.

The Children Act

Rated: MThe Children Act

Directed by: Richard Eyre

Produced by: Duncan Kenworthy

Screenplay based on his Novel by: Ian McEwan

Starring: Emma Thompson, Stanley Tucci, Fionn Whitehead, Ben Chaplin, Jason Watkins, Nikki Amuka-Bird, Anthony Calf, Rosie Cavaliero, Eileen Walsh, Nicholas Jones and Rupert Vansittart.

The Children Act is based on the novel written by Ian Ewan – he also writes the screenplay stating he started writing after spending time with ‘a handful of judges’ who were ‘Talking shop’.

A Sir Alan Ward (an appeal court judge) left the table to consult a bound volume of his own judgments to settle a disagreement.  Ian found himself with the book, reading the judgments and finding the cases written like short stories; those involved captured in broad strokes; the dilemma written with sympathy for the ones who inevitably lose.

Several years later, The Children Act was written.

The film opens with the sound of a gentle heartbeat, blood reaching through arteries like the branches of trees the film revolving around a case where a seventeen-year-old Jehovah Witness’ boy, Adam (Fionn Whitehead) who has leukemia, refuses a blood transfusion because of his faith.

To the Jehovah Witness, the soul, like life itself, lives in the blood, therefore, it belongs to God.  To allow another person’s blood or soul enter his veins would be blasphemous.

The hospital moves to force the transfusion under the instruction of The Children Act, 1989:

“When a court determines any question with respect to … the upbringing of a child … the child’s welfare shall be the court’s paramount consideration.”

The case lands on the desk of eminent High Court judge Fiona Maye (Emma Thompson), who now childless and struggling in the relationship with her husband Jack (Stanley Tucci) because of her commitment to her career, finds her emotions breaking through her usual cold rational as she decides the fate of Adam’s life – to allow him to die for his faith, or force him to live at the cost of his beliefs.

She decides to hear from Adam himself, to see that he understands the painful death that awaits at the refusal of the transfusion.

A highly unusual circumstance, she sits by his hospital bed and ends up singing with him as he plays his guitar.

This is a practical, concise and highly intelligent woman who has sworn not to allow her emotion to enter her decision-making process – all very believable from the performance of Emma Thompson.  Her place is to make decisions based on law not morals.

All the while imagining her husband having an affair, writing a text, ‘Having fun?’ Then having to delete when work and making life-and-death decisions for other people and their families once again become the priority.

When Adam survives, when his life is more important than his dignity, he chases the only one who understands: the woman who decided to save his life.

This is a film about the characters who are making serious decisions all day, every day.  Emma Thompson shows clarity of mind when making a judgment in court balanced against the confusion and overflow of hurt when her husband explains his unhappiness in their marriage: ‘Do you remember the last time we made love?’ he asks.

‘No idea!’ she states while pouring over the arguments for and against the separation of conjoined twins.

Then we see this fascinating case of Adam playout in court, from the medical side to the point of view of his parents, to the clear mind of a judge entangled in emotion from her personal life, to still be able to make concise decisions; the consequences of her decision shown in this strange and precocious boy who lives.  Who wants to know more about the life he feels he owes to her.

The film asks the question – if you save a life, are you responsible for that life?

Not in the court of law.

The Children Act is a quietly emotive film that gives a deeper understanding of those stories we’ve all read in the papers.

It’s a thought-provoking film about how the court has more power over life than religion.  And the cost it takes from those who make the judgment and the ones who have to live with a decision not their own.

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