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Liam (2001)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:76
Fresh:53
Rotten:23
Average Rating:6.4/10
Consensus: Though Liam's harrowing story is reminiscent of Angela's Ashes, it showcases strong performances, including one by child actor Anthony Borrows.
Runtime: 1 hr 31 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis:
In the 1930s, Britain was between wars and on the verge of depression. Family homes were rented, pubs were smoke-filled dens and streetlights were minimal. For seven year old, Liam (Anthony...
In the 1930s, Britain was between wars and on the verge of depression. Family homes were rented, pubs were smoke-filled dens and streetlights were minimal. For seven year old, Liam (Anthony Burrows), growing up against the bleak and gritty backdrop of the Irish Catholic quarter of Liverpool, along with his older brother and sister, is a daily struggle.
While Liam is at school being terrorized by the Catholic priest and school teacher his brother (David Hart) is working at the shipyards to help support the family while Teresa (Megan Burns), his sister, is sent to clean for a wealthy Jewish family and finds herself an unwilling participant in her employer’s adulterous affair.
Despite the hardships of the times, the family attempts to provide a light in the darkness. Liam's mother (Claire Hackett) is caring and devout, fighting to hold her family together. His father (Ian Hart) is a responsible working man, proud to be employed when so many others are not. But hard times have hit the Liverpool Docks and once Liam's father loses his job, the family is sent into intractable poverty. Helpless, embittered and determined to find someone to blame, he joins the local Fascist Party with tragic consequences.
LIAM is a poignant portrait of a family’s free-fall into poverty seen through the eyes of an innocent child, personifying the dream of a brighter future.
LIAM is directed by Stephen Frears. The film is produced by Colin McKeown and MartinTempia; executive produced by David M. Thompson, Tessa Ross and Sally Hibbin; and co-produced by Ulrich Felsberg. The script is written by Jimmy McGovern. Lions Gate Films will release LIAM on September 14th. It has a running time of 90 minutes and is not yet rated. --© 2001 Lions Gate Films
Starring: Anthony Burrows, Ian Hart, Anne Reid, Claire Hackett
Starring: Anthony Burrows, Ian Hart, Anne Reid, Claire Hackett
Director: Stephen Frears
Director: Stephen Frears
Screenwriter: Jimmy McGovern
Studio: Lions Gate Films
Reviews for Liam
Frears approaches the material in a humanistic and gentle manner and coaxes astonishingly assured performances from his young actors as well as the more veteran players.
Despite the downbeat nature of the project, Frears delivers moments of surprising humor, tenderness and even hope.
As downbeat as some of Loach's movies are, they never sink to such overwrought, melodramatic depths or rely on as many unbelievable plot contrivances as does Liam.
An emotional investment well worth making -- the vision Frears creates is hard, but, even at its bleakest, recognizably human.
The harshness of his movie is affecting, never completely demoralizing.
Within the shopworn limits of McGovern's script, Frears and his actors make the most of things.
A convincing drama about how the open-heartedness of an eight-year-old boy is dashed by the world-hating dogma of the church and the stranger-hating prejudice of his father.
It's almost numbingly sad, but you won't regret watching -- and you'll surely never forget it.
Too much registers as overly familiar: The Church is an easy scapegoat, and poverty and joblessness are obvious villains.
The story is simple, but the emotions it evokes are not, and they make an intimate impact due to the commendable work of the cast.
The ending to Liam is not to be believed. It has one of those horrible and ridiculously improbable ending incidents that occur only as plot devices in movies.
Given the opportunity to work on a more personal drama, Frears delivers with his finest work in years.
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