The Quiet Girl is an Irish tear-jerker

8/10

Summary

The Quiet Girl REVIEW

GARY STEEL gets all teary watching this very special film about a lonely little girl who finds the meaning of love.

Screening in NZ from Thursday 21 July

At first, I suspected The Quiet Girl was going to be one of those grim rite of passage dramas that you should see rather than really want to. Then I wondered if it was simply going to be one of those gently bucolic feel-good dramas that are never as meaningful as they promise to be. The Quiet Girl is grim in parts and it is gently bucolic as well, but its sum total is so much more than either.

 

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Set in rural Ireland in the 1970s, it stars Catherine Clinch as the nine-year-old quiet girl Cรกit, whose struggling (and ever-expanding) family are increasingly neglectful of her emotional needs. With another baby on the way, Cรกit is sent to spend the summer with a middle-aged childless couple who are distant relatives.

The unhappy reality of her life is so effectively depicted that when sheโ€™s deposited with strangers, you canโ€™t help wondering what other horrors lie around the next corner. But instead, Eibhlรญn (Carrie Crowley) and Seรกn (Andrew Bennett) turn out to be a warm, kind and patient couple of slowly bringing some joy back to Cรกitโ€™s existence.

Director Colm Bairรฉad shoots the film almost as though itโ€™s viewed through Cรกitโ€™s eyes, and we see almost nothing that she doesnโ€™t. This brilliantly captures the way she experiences things, from the pleasure she takes in having her hair gently brushed by Eibhlรญn to the mixture of revulsion and curiosity at an open-cask funeral, and especially the slowly deepening relationship she has with the initially reticent Seรกn, who becomes for all intents and purposes her real father figure.

All of the performances are superb, but itโ€™s Carrie Crowley who deserves an award. Sheโ€™s perfect as the kind would-be mother harbouring a tragic secret that, of course, Cรกit eventually finds out about. Catherine Clinch in the main role doesnโ€™t have to do a lot of talking, but sheโ€™s perfect for the part, with her subtle body language and a sweet face that instantly makes your heart go out to her character.

The era and the locations are captured perfectly and the story is one that any loving parent will appreciate. While it would be easy for a film like this to pile on the sentiment, its emotive content is painted with a subtlety that makes it all the more potent.

Some might be a little put off by the old-fashioned box-style aspect ratio (what, a nod to TV in the 1970s?) or the fact that itโ€™s an Irish-language film with subtitles, but nothing gets in the way of The Quiet Girlโ€™s quiet brilliance. I couldnโ€™t help shedding a tear or three.

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Steel has been penning his pungent prose for 40 years for publications too numerous to mention, most of them consigned to the annals of history. He is Witchdoctor's Editor-In-Chief/Music and Film Editor. He has strong opinions and remains unrepentant. Steel's full bio can be found here

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