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An Everlasting Piece (2000)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:45
Fresh:24
Rotten:21
Average Rating:5.4/10
Consensus: This comedy is too slight to leave an impression, and its attempts at whimsy are not as funny as they could have been.
Runtime: 1 hr 43 mins
Genre: Comedies
Synopsis: Barbers Colm (Barry McEvoy) and George (Brian F. O'Byrne) think they've hit the big time when they take over the only existing Northern Ireland hairpiece franchise from a Bible-toting lunatic... Barbers Colm (Barry McEvoy) and George (Brian F. O'Byrne) think they've hit the big time when they take over the only existing Northern Ireland hairpiece franchise from a Bible-toting lunatic (Billy Connolly) who has been admitted to the asylum in which they work. As a Catholic and a Protestant working together, Colm and George think that they'll be able to serve bald men of both ilks, and will have the market conquered. But selling toupees isn't as easy as they think. To make matters worse, they have to contend with deadbeats, the IRA, the British Army, and, worst of all, a competitor--Toupee or Not Toupee--that threatens their exclusivity agreement. When their wig supplier pits Colm and George--who've deemed themselves The Piece People--against Toupee or Not Toupee to see who can sell the most hairpieces and win the Northern Ireland franchise, the race is on for clients. Bronagh (Anna Friel), Colm's feisty girlfriend, develops a creative sales plan that leads to both political and moral decisions for the partners. Despite its humor, Barry McEvoy's script incorporates the tensions felt between Catholics and Protestants in the 1980s. Barry Levinson's direction evokes the spirit and nostalgia of his Baltimore trilogy, which includes DINER, AVALON, and TIN MEN. [More]
Starring: Barry McEvoy, Brian F. O'Byrne, Billy Connolly, Anna Friel
Starring: Barry McEvoy, Brian F. O'Byrne, Billy Connolly, Anna Friel
Director: Barry Levinson
Director: Barry Levinson
Screenwriter: Barry Levinson
Composer: Hans Zimmer
Studio: DreamWorks Distribution LLC
Reviews for An Everlasting Piece
A grab-bag of unsteady chuckles that depend on misunderstood accent gags ... and 'quirky family' bits.
This little film tries too hard to charm, and in the process loses its bite.
McEvoy certainly earns points for finding a new and unusual way of addressing the oft-explored issue of the Northern Ireland Catholic/Protestant conflict.
The movie has the ring of old, beloved and partially but not entirely true stories.
There aren?t any corny bald jokes: The movie is smart enough not to waste it?s time with lame humor about hair thinning.
The comedy inherent in toupee gags gradually runs dry, and the interplay between the main characters sometimes doesn't offer enough sparks to pick up the slack.
'In trying to tackle the bigger issues the film loses what made it so quirky in the first place.'
Occasionally cute, but certainly not as funny as it could and should have been.
All attempts at comedy seem to have been swept under the rug in a movie that at best could be called intermittently whimsical.
Some of the banter between the two leads is lightly entertaining, though none of the humor is sharp enough to relate to the tragic setting in any meaningful way.
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