00.23 - 17.33.
2 men, 2 chairs, a table, a pack of fags and a chat. One 17 minute take. Perfection.
Bobby Sands (Michael Fassbender) has organised a hunger strike among the IRA prisoners of the Maze prison. He was the leader of a group who were political prisoners and as such demanded to be treated differently to normal convicts. To achieve their aims they would refuse food from the 1st of March 1981. We all know how his story ended but here we see what happened before when Bobby meets with Father Moran (Liam Cunningham).
It's a scene that shatters the mythology surrounding Sands but a scene that never once belittles him. It humanises him while reminding us of the human cost of the strikes. Reminds us that Sands was seen as a pawn in a political game by both sides. An indictment of the IRA high command and the British government. Fassbender's wiry physicality brings Sands to life brilliantly while Liam Cunningham's priest is every decent priest you've ever met, he's utterly believable. Both men bouncing off each other, letting slip little slivers of themselves to get under the other's skin.
Stunning.
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