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According to Ronan Bennett, the novelist and screenwriter who wrote Rebel Heart, a terrible thing happened in 1922. A
Belfast District Inspector named John W. Nixon led a group of policemen as they broke into
the home of a Catholic family, the McMahons. All the men in
the house a father, his five sons, ages eleven to twenty-four, and a
twenty-five-year-old boarder were herded into their front parlor, given a moment to
pray, and shot. Owen McMahon, three of his sons, and the boarder died instantly. Another
son died a week later. The eleven-year-old survived, hiding under a couch. This slaughter,
it has been suggested, was in retribution for the murders of two police auxiliaries a day
earlier.
Bennetts version of the
McMahon murders is one of the set pieces in Rebel
Heart, a made-for-television drama from the BBC that places a fictitious young man in
the center of the Easter Rebellion and the Irish War of Independence. In 1916, Ernie Coyne
(James DArcy), rushes into the storming of
The idealism and violence of the
Irish struggle for independence was also covered in Neil Jordans 1996 Michael Collins, where the female lead was
played without ammunition or explosions of any sort by Julia Roberts. In contrast, the
love story in Rebel Heart begins with an
interesting reversal: on the barricades, Ita
is the savvy player and the romantic innocent in danger is Ernie. She provides covering
fire for his dash back to the post office.
These early scenes are some of
the best in Rebel Heart lively, crisp
and well-shot, featuring a nice mix of historical figures and imagined secondary
characters. Vincent Regan and Frank Laverty start off as a pair of cheerfully cynical
rebels and their wry delivery is well-matched to the snappy dialogue. But the Irish rebels
were completely outgunned and the fighting ends when the republicans surrender to British
soldiers. The rebellion leaders are executed. Ernies banker father attempts to
secure his release from British custody, but Ernie defies him and goes to jail with other
supporters of an Irish republic.
Its after Ernies
release from jail that Rebel Heart starts to
falter. The secondary characters become either one-dimensional stereotypes (Ernies
neurasthenic mother, concerned aunt, bourgeois father) or such obvious plot-advancing
devices that theyre not even fleshed-out enough to be stereotypes. The exception is
Ernies visit to
Still, why is it necessary for
actual ideas and events to be framed as mere background texture for love stories? This is
a common conceit of historical drama, of course, but it is exasperating in Rebel Heart. The Feeney murders are projected as
all the more horrible because they happened to the heros girlfriend as though
they werent horrible enough on their own. Later, Bennetts teleplay shows that
the Republican side was also capable of horrific acts: Ernie shoots a slightly threatening
officer cold-blooded, awful, but not exactly comparable to murdering more than half
a family. Ita, so capable and alive
returning sniper fire at the beginning of the series, seems to dwindle into Ernies
sidekick as he matures over the six years that follow the doomed uprising at the post
office.
Brendan Coyle is more than
adequate as Michael Collins and does a workmanlike turn at indicating his struggles to
reach an agreement. But neither Coyles acting nor his dialogue compares well to Liam
Neesons turn as Collins in the Neil Jordan film.
Rebel Hearts wit and verve disappears as it
enters its final half hour. This may even be intentional on the filmmakers part.
Perhaps they intended to show how dividing north from south in
There was some controversy over this film, although that didnt
seem to help its ratings when it was broadcast in the
A sad and seemingly endless cycle
of atrocity and retribution plays out in this well-intentioned but mostly forgettable
miniseries. Rebel Heart is a valiant attempt at
capturing the chaos and intensity of the Irish struggle for independence, but it ends up
just another mildly interesting story about a boy and a girl.
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