Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 90000000
Revenue
$ 140807547
Tom O'Meara
Rory Devaney
Sheila O'Meara
Edwin Diaz
Billy Burke
Peter Fitzsimmons
Chief Jim Kelly
Megan Doherty
Sean Phelan
Harry Sloan
Bridget O'Meara
Morgan O'Meara
Annie O'Meara
Martin MacDuff
Dessie
Gerard
Young Frankie
Frankie's Father
Frankie's Mother
Frankie's Sister
Customs Agent
Teenager
Rookie Cop
Jerry
Hispanic Man
Hispanic Girl
Teddy
Thug
Tony
Joey
Jack Fitzsimmons
Maid
Bishop
Cousin Eileen
Aunt Birdie
Brooke
Father Canlon
Kevin
Irish Musician
Irish Musician
Irish Musician
Tour Guide
Young Dominican
Masked Burglar
Uniformed Cop
Detective
Trucker
Evan Stanley
Art Fisher
Rory's Friend (uncredited)
Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-06-06
On the face of it, two A-list men at the top of the bill should have made this compelling, but sadly what we get is a rather lacklustre thriller that is positively lacking in thrills! The story centres around police officer "O'Meara" (Harrison Ford) who takes in an Irish lodger "Devaney" (Brad Pitt and his hilarious Irish accent). From the outset, we are aware that the lodger is really an IRA terrorist who is hiding out under an assumed name, and gradually his host begins to suspect that all is not what is seems. What now ensues is a really rather poorly constructed story that leaves breadcrumbs for us all to follow to an ending that though taut at times along the way, is really nothing very interesting. As a Brit, I've always found these intrigue films that portray terrorists as glorified freedom fighters a bit tough to stomach and the narrative here plays to just about every dumb stereotype imaginable. There is precious little by way of action and the pace sort of lumbers along with little to engage the little grey cells. The plot is overly simplistic and from a political perspective, totally one-sided and that renders the whole thing little better than an hollow outing for both. Though Pitt is at his most eye-catching, this is nothing at all to write home about and offers us little of meaning to help comprehend the complexities of the true problems on the island of Ireland.