It addresses the essential human need for dignity, for freedom, for mastery over one's life.
Rory O'Shea Was Here (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:21
Fresh:9
Rotten:12
Average Rating:5.6/10
Consensus: The dramatic aspects of Rory O'Shea Was Here veer into mawkish, formulaic sentiment, which undercuts the characters' individuality.
Theatrical Release:Feb 4, 2005 Limited
Synopsis: The winner of the Audience Award at the 2004 Edinburgh International Film Festival, Rory O'Shea Was Here is an extraordinary story of determination that fuses highly emotional drama with bracingly... The winner of the Audience Award at the 2004 Edinburgh International Film Festival, Rory O'Shea Was Here is an extraordinary story of determination that fuses highly emotional drama with bracingly boisterous humor. Inspired by the experiences of real people, the film follows two young men with physical disabilities as they band together and seize an opportunity to savor life on their own terms. All his life, Michael Connolly (Steven Robertson) has lived in the residential care of Dublin's Carrigmore Home for the Disabled. Michael has cerebral palsy, uses a motorized wheelchair, and has a significant speech impairment. Most people find it difficult to make out what he is saying, and simply stop trying. But Rory O'Shea (James McAvoy), a new arrival at Carrigmore, is not like most people -- or any of the other Carrigmore residents. Rory is able to understand Michael. Rory has Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a degenerative muscle-wasting condition. All Rory has are the use of two of his fingers, partial movements of his head -- and unlimited use of his mouth. These two young men form a friendship that empowers them to look beyond Carrigmore and its inflexible supervisor Eileen (Brenda Fricker). After the rebellious and outspoken Rory masterminds a field trip to pub and nightclub, Michael is emboldened and motivated to finesse an appeal to Ability Ireland for a personal-assistance grant. His appeal is successful, enabling the two friends to move into a flat of their own and recruit the disarming Siobhan (Romola Garai) to assist them with their daily needs. Rory and Michael both develop growing feelings for Siobhan, and their rivalry for her attention only further accelerates their shared journey towards true independence and liberation. -- © Focus Features [More]
Starring: Steven Robertson, James McAvoy, Romola Garai, Brenda Fricker
Starring: Steven Robertson, James McAvoy, Romola Garai, Brenda Fricker, James Flynn, Gerard McSorley, Tom Hickey
Director: Damien O'Donnell
Director: Damien O'Donnell
Screenwriter: Jeffrey Caine
Producer: James Flynn
Composer: David Julyan
Studio: Focus Features
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Reviews for Rory O'Shea Was Here
The script, despite doses of irreverent humour, feels manipulative...
Funny and moving, and more entertaining than some of the movies you are considering this weekend.
For all its noble intentions and vigorous performances, never transcends the claustrophobic character study.
By all outward appearance and promotional literature, this movie wishes to depict the lives of seriously handicapped people in as real and accurate a way as possible. So why does it resort to some of the most insultingly lame clichés imaginable?
As a feel-good movie about disabled youths, Rory O'Shea Was Here gets the job done, but it isn't interesting or daring enough to make it worth a trip to a theater.
Sentimentality and gloom are treated with appropriate, if often unprintable, contempt.
Director Damien O'Donnell and screenwriter Jeffrey Caine faithfully adhere to the bylaws of melodrama and quickly plunge us from triumph to tragedy.
Writer Jeffrey Caine and director Damien O'Donnell all but cut out our vital organ with moments of hard-sell poignancy.
In this earnest but ill-conceived message movie, Irish director Damien O'Donnell appears determined to teach us a lesson without quite understanding it himself.
Thanks to a liberal dose of bracing humor and fresh, believable characters, Rory O'Shea emerges as the kind of inspirational movie that actually earns its crowd-rousing response as opposed to merely pushing the same old, emotion-coaxing buttons.
Despite the periodic twinkling, the occasional detours into sentimentality and, most egregiously, the syrupy soundtrack that threatens to engulf the story at every turn, Rory O'Shea Was Here is better than the usual three-stage journey of courage.
Wildly uneven, constantly veering between honest emotions and insights and bald manipulation and contrivance.
Pic is hampered by a predictable, only mildy humorous script that chugs its way to a so-what conclusion.
As charming a devil as the actor James McAvoy may be, the movie gives Rory, in his defensive brashness, no layers, no dimension of personal dream.
A plea for equality of opportunity, a worthy objective somewhat obscured by non-disabled actors occupying the lead roles.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 88% 88% | Inglourious Basterds |
| 78% 78% | The Hangover |
| 49% 49% | Taking Woodstock |
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| 47% 47% | The Girl From Monaco |
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