Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0

Thomas Crimmin

Kathleen

Regan

Donnelly

Chief Warder

Holy Healy

Prison Governor

Dr Flyn

Lavery

Mrs. O'Hara

Mickser's Wife

1st Customs Official

2nd Customs Official

Poet

Meg

Minna

Prison Chaplain

Jenkinson

'Himself' - The Hangman

Silvertop

Flaherty

Mickser

Kelly

Walsh

Dunlavin

Neighbour

O'Connor

Cleary

Carroll

Reception Warder

Reception Clerk

Clancy

O'Shaughnessy

Food Orderly

Stretcher Bearer

Shamrock Attendant

1st Publican

Publican Woman

2nd Publican

Old Patriot

Irate Citizen

Dock Worker

Charwoman

Lavery's Assistant

Written by John Chard on 2015-04-07
Condemned men, strange? The Quare Fellow is directed by Arthur Dreifuss who along with Jacqueline Sundstrom co-adapts the screenplay from the Brendan Behan play. It stars Patrick McGoohan, Sylvia Syms, Walter Macken and Dermot Kelly. Music is by Alexander Faris and cinematography by Peter Hennessy. Thomas Crimmin (McGoohan) begins new employment at a Dublin jail firmly believing in the benefits of the death penalty. Not everyone of his colleagues feels the same, though, and as Crimmin works through his time and gets close to the wife of a condemned man, his beliefs are splintered. The play by all accounts was awash with humour, something which this filmic version considerably lacks. Dreifuss prefers to make the film bleak, both in surroundings and via the characterisations. The prison is perpetually cold and grey, smiles are hard to find within these walls, cynicism and fatalism drip from the wrought iron doors, and of course moral compasses are all over the place. This doesn't make it a bad film, not a bit of it, it's a tough drama acted superbly, with some brains and brawn injected into the script. Yet it ultimately plays its hand as a straight forward anti-capital punishment peace, missing opportunities to expand upon hinted at themes, particularly where Syms' fraught wife character is concerned. Still, it's a must for McGoohan and Syms fans and for those who like gritty pics set in prisons. 6.5/10