IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER
Roger Ebert
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The Guildford Four were framed; there seems to be no doubt about
that. A feckless young Irishman named Gerry Conlon and three others were
charged by the British police with being the IRA terrorists who bombed a
pub in Guildford, England, in 1974, and a year later they were convicted
and sentenced to life.
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But great doubts grew up about their guilt, it was proven that
evidence in their favor had been withheld, and in 1989 their convictions
were overturned.
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"In the Name of the Father" tells this story in angry dramatic
detail, showing that the British police were so obsessed with the need
to produce the IRA bombers that they seized on flimsy hearsay evidence
and then tortured their prisoners to extract confessions. The film is
based on Conlon's autobiography, Proved Innocent, and in its general
thrust is factual - although the director, Jim Sheridan, cheerfully
explained to the London Daily Telegraph last month how he changed facts,
characters and dates to suit his fictional purposes.
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As he tells it, the story becomes a tragedy of errors. The film's
rambling opening scenes are important in setting up what follows: Conlon
(Daniel Day-Lewis), a young man from Belfast, finds himself in England
with some friends, half-heartedly looking for work, sleeping in a shared
squatter's pad, drinking and doing drugs. Conlon is not a model citizen.
One night he robs a prostitute of her earnings, and returns to Ireland,
flashing the money and buying drinks for family and friends. A former
friend fingers him to the police, and he's snatched from his bed in a
predawn raid - along with his astonished father, who had nothing to do
with anything, and also eventually finds himself serving a life
sentence.
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It is Conlon's bad luck that his visit to the Guildford area
coincided with the bombing, and that his newfound wealth looks
suspicious. The IRA is a tightly disciplined organization whose members
are not accustomed to getting rich off their work, or throwing money
around, but never mind: Conlon is a splendid suspect, and when a
sadistic British policeman (Corin Redgrave) gets finished with him, he's
a confessed murderer.
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The movie does a harrowing job of showing how, and why, a man might
be made to confess to a bombing he didn't commit. The early sequences of
the movie are a Kafkaesque nightmare for Conlon, who finds himself
snatched from his bed and locked up for the rest of his life. It's a
nightmare for us, too, because Conlon behaves so stupidly, avoiding the
obvious things he could say and do to defend himself.
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The greater part of the movie takes place in prison, where Conlon
and his father (Pete Postlethwaite) are housed in the same cell. His
father, a hard-working, honest man, is filled with indignation. Conlon
is more filled with self-pity and despair, but gradually, inspired by
his father, he begins trying to prove his innocence, and is lucky to
convince a stubborn lawyer (Emma Thompson) to take his case. She works
for years, and even so might not have made much progress if a police
evidence technician hadn't mistakenly given her a report she was never
meant to see.
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Convinced by the film's documentary detail, we assume all these
facts are based on truth, and it is a little surprising to discover that
the sadistic British policeman is a composite of several officers, that
Conlon and his father were never in the same cell - and that the crucial
character of Joe McAndrew (Don Baker), an IRA man who confesses to the
Guildford bombings, is a fictional invention. All the same, the main
thrust of the story is truthful: British courts found that Conlon and
the others were jailed unjustly.
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The film's dramatic thrust doesn't simply go from wrong to right,
however. It's more the story of how Gerry Conlon changes and grows
during those years in prison. He is shown in the early scenes to be an
aimless drifter - a dimmer and more genial version, in fact, of the
unbalanced, angry homeless man in Mike Leigh's "Naked," a British film
made at about the same time. In prison, he educates himself and the law
educates him; by the time of his release, he is sober, intelligent,
radicalized. Seeing this process happen is absorbing, especially since
so much of it is inspired by the love of the father for his son.
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And yet the film is somehow less than it should be. The urgency of
the early scenes is lost when the story turns to prison life, and I
began to feel that dialogue and events were repeating themselves. Points
about the prison years and the fight for an appeal are made too
painstakingly, and there is much dialog when a little would have done. I
had the feeling that if 10 or 12 minutes had been edited from the film,
from the scenes behind bars, that would have made a big difference.
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Some of the weaknesses of script and structure are obscured by the
power of Day-Lewis' performance; he proves here once again that he is
one of the most talented and interesting actors of his generation.
Sheridan was the director of "My Left Foot," for which Day-Lewis won the
Academy Award for best actor. Here is a story with similar appeal, and
yet somehow the story doesn't coil and spring; it simply unfolds.
¡¡From Chicago Sun-Times
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