Sujet : Re: Say Nothing
De : nobody (at) *nospam* nowhere.com (moviePig)
Groupes : rec.arts.tvDate : 22. Nov 2024, 23:47:56
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vhr1ms$1c91n$2@dont-email.me>
References : 1
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 11/22/2024 5:19 PM, Rhino wrote:
FX has a new series called Say Nothing that may be of interest to anyone with curiousity about what the Irish called "The Troubles". This is the period of time starting in the late 1960s in Northern Ireland which frequently made the news over assorted acts of violence.
Say Nothing is based on a very successful book of the same name about two young Catholic sisters who joined the IRA in 1972 and took active part in violent operations to drive the British out of Northern Ireland. Unlike so many productions these days, they didn't invent these young women or gender-reverse real-life men: this is based on a true story.
TV inevitably takes liberties with reality/history for dramatic purposes and I have not yet read any articles outlining what liberties were taken here so I will NOT say that every moment in this production is exactly the way things played out. However, it has the feel of reality. I am not particularly well-versed in this conflict but I know a little about it and I haven't seen anything yet that rang false.
I've just finished the third of the nine episodes in the limited series and I've only recognized one of the actors in it: Rory Kinnear (who plays the Prime Minister in The Diplomat) as the British brigadier (general) who is in charge of the British Army's intelligence unit, which is trying to identify and capture the leaders of the IRA in Belfast. The remaining actors are unfamiliar to me despite having seen a few other Irish productions but they do a pretty impressive job in their roles, particularly Lola Pettigrew, who plays Dolours Price, the more outgoing on the two sisters. She's the lead in this production.
The story goes right back to when she and her sister first joined the IRA in an active role. (Previously, women were relegated to rolling bandages to treat the men if they got injured.) We see the environment that made her go from participating in peaceful protests to feeling the need to go beyond that. We see her participate in an armed "expropriation" (bank robbery) and help a captured IRA member escape British custody, just for starters.
There is, inevitably, violence depicted in this series, including bombings, shootings, and torture, so if that kind of thing upsets you, this show is probably not for you. If you want to get a sense for what life was like during this conflict, at least on the Catholic side, you should find this informative and engaging. (If you're deeply familiar with the conflict, you may find it oversimplifies things a bit. For example, I have yet to see any sign of the different factions among the IRA that vied for leadership of the effort.)
IMDB gives this an 8.4 rating.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt31122777/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
This appears to be only on Hulu in the U.S.