Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 25000000
Revenue
$ 16900000

Michael Collins

Harry Roland

Ned Broy

Eamon de Valera

Kitty Kiernan

Joe O'Reilly

Liam Tobin

Tom Cullen

Smith

Cathal Brugha

Collin's Assassin

Soames

British Officer

Patrick Pearse

Thomas MacDonagh

Thomas Clarke

James Connolly

Captain Lee-Wilson

Hoey

Kavanagh

Sean McKeoin

Rory O'Connor

Austin Stack

Arthur Griffith

Cosgrave

Vaughan's Hotel Clerk

Dublin Castle Soldier

Vinny Byrne

Charlie Dalton

Squad Youth #1

Squad Youth #2

Squad Man #1

Squad Man #2

Chaplain at Lincoln Jail

Lincoln Taxi Driver

Belfast Detective

Soldier on Station

McCrae

Black and Tan on Lorry

Black and Tan on Lorry

Rosie

Gresham Hotel Bellboy

Man Following Broy

Black and Tan

Officer in Bath

Officer in Bed

Girl in Bed

Officer in Park

Croke Park Hurler

Tenor in Restaurant

Pianist in Restaurant

Journalist

Speaker in the Dail

Vice-Consul McCready

Young Gunman

Free State Soldier

Republican #1

Republican #2

Santry the Blacksmith

Drinker in Pub

Drunk (uncredited)

Party Guest (uncredited)

Tenament Boy (uncredited)

Tenement Tenant (uncredited)

Tenement Boy (uncredited)

Woman (uncredited)

Kid with Gun (uncredited)

Woman That Gives Directions to Collins (uncredited)

Bloody Sunday Spectator (uncredited)
Written by SPDonlan on 2024-07-20
Like many such epics, _Michael Collins_ is melodramatic and partial, about a past all too present. But much of the critical hostility it received/s is for offending popular pieties, imperial or republican, no less prejudiced. Jordan wrestled with historiography and moral complexity in writing his screenplay. He understood that any historical account involves selection and even distortion, not least to persuade producers and sell tickets. Ultimately, however, the period and place are too complex for Jordan to explain or Collins to contain: its violence is too roughly contextualized, its framing too hagiographical, and its characterization of De Valera too broad.