Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 18000000
Revenue
$ 2153029

Henry Hunt

Nellie

Joshua

Joseph

Mary

Robert

Esther

Lord Liverpool, the Prime Minister

Lord Sidmouth, the Home Secretary

Mr Hobhouse

Mr Grout

Mr Golightly

Mr Cobb

Mrs Moss

General Sir John Byng

Samuel Bamford

Jemima Bamford

John Knight

John Thacker Sexton

Joseph Johnson

Mrs Johnson

James Wroe

Dr Joseph Healey

Jack, Wroe's Printer

John Bagguley

Samuel Drummond

John Johnston

Deputy Chief Constable Nadin

Oliver the Spy

Chippendale the Spy

Singing Weaver

Prince Regent

Lady Conyngham

Magistrate Rev Ethelston

Magistrate Rev Hay

Mrs. Mary Hay

Magistrate Colonel Fletcher

Magistrate Norris

Magistrate Hutton

Magistrate Rev Mallory

Magistrate Rev Gutteridge

Magistrate Clowes

Magistrate Warmley

Magistrate Tatton

Magistrate Rev Perryn

Magistrate Bolt

Magistrate Marriott

Mary Fildes

Susannah Saxton

Female Reformer

Female Reformer

Female Reformer

Female Reformer

Female Reformer

Richard Carlile

John Tyas

Edward Baines

John Smith

Lt. Col Guy L'Estrange

Lieutenant Colonel Dalrymple

Tuke, the painter

Bessie, Johnson's Servant

Nadin's Constable

Nadin's Constable

Young George

Young Sarah

Baby Sarah

Baby Sarah

Man Giving Directions

A Lord

Mill Worker

Egg Seller

Peter Wilkes, a Farrier

Mrs Mickletwhaite, Drunk Servant/ Thief

Edward Wilde, Watch Thief

James Mahon, Coat Thief

Outraged Reformer

Potato Thrower

Potato Thrower's Wife

Man Drilling Reformers

Stableman

Thomas Worrell, Stone Clearing Boss

Richard Wainwright, a Mill Owner

Mill Overseer

Abusive Bystander

Abusive Bystander

Servant at Magistrates' Breakfast

Chadderton Woman

Chadderton Woman's Husband

Chadderton Woman's Father

Chadderton Woman's Daughter

Angry Citizen

Angry Citizen

Mr Buxton

Magistrate's Messenger

Wigan Man

Wigan Man's Sister

Margaret Goodwin, Woman Recognising Yeoman

Passer-By

Lady at Races

Gentleman at Races

Gentleman at Races

Vicar

Ben Thorpe, Manchester & Salford Yeomanry

Thomas Sheldermine, Manchester & Salford Yeomanry

Manchester & Salford Yeomanry

Manchester & Salford Yeomanry

Manchester & Salford Yeomanry

Manchester & Salford Yeomanry

Manchester & Salford Yeomanry

Manchester & Salford Yeomanry

Manchester & Salford Yeomanry

Manchester & Salford Yeomanry

Captain William J Ford, 15th Hussars

Captain William DePasse 15th Hussars

Captain Phillip Woodhouse, 15th Hussars

Trooper John Millfield, 15th Hussars

Soldier, 15th Hussars

Rob Hullock, Soldier 31st Foot Regiment

Soldier, 31st Foot Regiment

Joshua Harrison, a Musician

Jacob Flather, a Musician

Joseph Cliffs, a Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Musician

Samuel Cleator (uncredited)

Swordsmith (uncredited)

Footman to the Duke of Wellington (uncredited)

Female Reformer (uncredited)

Female Reformer (uncredited)

Female Reformer (uncredited)

Mill Child (uncredited)

Pie Buyer

Citizen #2

Mill Child (uncredited)

Lord (uncredited)

Written by narrator56 on 2020-04-05
Fine historical film, though it has less emotional depth than other Mike Leigh movies. That makes sense, for his movies have never been described as an epic before. I often state when I write reviews that I am patient than many viewers when it comes to slower paced movies. Also, since I write novels in my spare time and feature plenty of dialogue, I don't mind a lot of talking in movies either. I think this movie lacked some of the emotional impact of other Mike Leigh films, perhaps due its scope. You know how it is; people can shrug off a disaster elsewhere in the world when it kills 500 people, but if they hear a personal story well told about a single victim, the tears may fall. There are a lot of people in this movie. There were so many extras that I half expected to see myself in one of the crowd scenes. With so many different main characters and perspectives, I didn't find myself forming a connection with any of them. But I liked the film just fine, and I never would have sat through a documentary on the subject.

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2023-08-06
It's quite interesting to consider that even in the mother of western democracies, as recently as two hundred years ago most men did not have the vote in the UK, and great swathes of urban Britain had no representation at all. Mike Leigh is perhaps a little heavy handed here, but he does offer us an at times poignant glimpse into the poverty in which the working class lived in England's north west whilst the governing class lived a life of opulence and privilege under the Prince Regent. Rory Kinnear is the renowned orator "Hunt" who travels the length and breadth of the land advocating a peaceful, positive, realignment of power. A trip to Manchester proves to be the ultimate catalyst for the increasingly panic-stricken authorities who - with events in Paris forty years early still prescient - have decided that these increasingly popular gatherings must be stamped out. Leigh has assembled a workmanlike cast here - there isn't really a star, as such - and that helps better illustrate that this is a story about the ordinary man. I say man, because we are a long way from female emancipation being on the back burner, even - indeed the stronger characters here - "Mary" (Rachel Finnegan) and "Nellie" (Maxine Peake) are entirely focussed on empowering their "men folk". What this film does not present though, is any sort of balance to the historical aspects of this conflict. It exaggerates the indifference and excesses of the landed gentry whilst offering a rather naive portrayal of some those advocating revolution. Like many films that present a political assessment of an hugely complex set of scenarios, it ends up reflecting the views of the auteur and that's a shame. This is a story of profound societal evolution that could have been more effective had the establishment been given slightly more airtime and been treated slightly less one-dimensionally and judgmentally. The dialogue is at times, though, really quite powerfully potent and this is a very authentic-looking story that history ought not to readily forge and that is well worth a watch.