‘Bring Them Down’ Review: Sinister Revenge in Rural Ireland

by Pelican Press
2 minutes read

‘Bring Them Down’ Review: Sinister Revenge in Rural Ireland

The lush, green, gorgeous scenery of rural Ireland is on generous display in “Bring Them Down,” a drama written and directed by Christopher Andrews. Nevertheless, if you choose to subject yourself to this meticulously crafted but intermittently punishing film, you might emerge with a determination to never visit the place ever. You may also find yourself with a permanent disinclination to ever consume a leg of lamb.

The people of this film are sheep farmers and they are not a happy lot. The focus is on two intertwined families. There’s Christopher Abbott’s Michael, a brooder, his black beard an insufficient mask for the ever-grim cast of his face. He lives with his incapacitated father, Ray, and when they’re alone together they speak Irish, an indication of their old-school values.

Those are shared by their neighbor Gary (Paul Ready), who’s married to Michael’s ex-girlfriend Caroline (Nora-Jane Noone). The movie opens with a car accident, shortly after Michael’s mother informs him that she’s leaving his father. This crash kills the mother and leaves Caroline with a scar over one side of her face.

That’s a lot of water under the bridge. In the present day, Gary and Caroline are the parents of Barry Keoghan’s Jack, a surly but ultimately heartbreakingly sensitive fellow. The shepherding rivalry between the two families grows increasingly vindictive and disturbingly gory as the picture moves along.

This portrait of already wounded people who can’t stop inflicting pain on themselves and each other has a great deal of integrity. But if you’re seeking ennobling sentiment, you’ll do well to look elsewhere.

Bring Them Down
Rated R for grisly animal treatment, language, themes. Running time: 1 hour 45 minutes. In theaters.



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