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Oranges And Sunshine - jdiff (16feb11) |
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February 6, 2011
First Look -
26 Feb 2011 - 21:00
(105 mins)
at
Cineworld
Oranges and Sunshine is a deeply moving study of emotionally
scarred adults who were illegally deported as children to Australia from
Britain in the 1940s and ‘50s. Toplining a superb Emily Watson as
Margaret Humphreys, the British social worker who brought the shameful
secret to world attention in the late ‘80s, this standout debut by Jim
Loach, son of director Ken Loach, will make a strong claim for arthouse
berths everywhere.
Rona Munro’s finely chiseled adaptation of
Humphreys’ 1996 book “Empty Cradles” astutely avoids flashbacks of
youngsters being herded onto boats. Set entirely in the 1980s, the movie
opens with Margaret (Watson) more or less stumbling onto the
life-changing story when confronted in Nottingham by Charlotte (Federay
Holmes), an Australian woman who wants “to find out who I am.”
Margaret
discovers Charlotte is one of thousands of British youngsters who were
unlawfully removed from children’s homes and “unfit” (i.e., unwed)
mothers and sent to Australia “for their own good.” The heartbreaking
stories Margaret hears will bring tears to most eyes. Without a hint of
sensationalism or manipulation, deportees discuss the emptiness of never
having felt a proper sense of identity. Others confess to feeling
worthless after years of mental and physical abuse in orphanages, many
of them church-run.
Watson is perfect as the upright,
compassionate and fiercely determined champion of victims’ rights.
Weaving has rarely been better than as the empty Jack, and Wenham brings
a sharp edge as the prickly Len.
Alissa Simon, Variety
Jim Loach will attend the screening
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