Like Branagh, who moved to England with his parents and siblings when he was nine, Buddy will eventually have to say goodbye.
And it’s the motivating factor for the family having to contemplate leaving their community behind. The violence isn’t just background noise so much as one of the louder, more dissonant instruments in an orchestra he’s conducting.
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It’s a movie that very much has the Troubles in mind, but as part of a bigger picture that constitutes the filmmaker’s feelings about his hometown. If you had to sum up Belfast in a single image, you could do worse than Dornan and Balfe dancing in the street with each other, smiles on their faces as familiar Irish R&B (new then, old now) plays, with the whole scene framed behind a loose wall of barbed wire. Belfast is Buddy’s kingdom, his safe place, until it can’t be any longer. is playing at the Saturday matinee picture show, blue-eyed Celtic soul is on every jukebox, and a man just landed on the moon. Star Trek is on TV, One Million Years B.C.
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An older friend, Moira (Lara McDonnell), teaches him how to nick chocolate bars from the sweets shop. Luckily, the lad has support from his grandparents (Ciarán Hinds and Dame Judi Dench), who, when they aren’t affectionately bickering with each other, counsel Buddy about how to woo the brainy girl he has a crush on. It also takes him away from the family a lot, much to consternation of Buddy, his brother, and his long-suffering mom ( Outlander‘s Catríona Balfe). His dad (Jamie Dornan) works in England, however, and has no issue with those of another faith - which makes the whole clan a target. Meet the Beatle: A Guide to Ringo Starr's Solo Career in 20 Songsīuddy’s family is Protestant.