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A former IRA member escapes to London and tries to forget his past. [38] 1987 Naming the Names: Sylvestra Le Touzel: Stuart Burge: Young Belfast woman committed to republican cause caught in web of conflicting loyalties and violence. [39] Based on a short fiction story by Anne Devlin. [40] 1987 TV movie Act of Betrayal: Lawrence Gordon Clark
Ira Einhorn was born in Philadelphia into a middle-class Jewish family. [2] [4] As a student at the University of Pennsylvania, where he received his undergraduate degree in English in 1961 before returning to complete some graduate work in the discipline in 1963, [5] [6] he became active in ecological groups and was part of the counterculture, anti-establishment, and anti-war movements of the ...
However, their next attack, to destroy a guarded power plant in concert with a planned German invasion, results in bloodshed. In order to flee, Dermot shoots a soldier blocking the way out. Sean is wounded in the foot and Johnny Corrigan is killed. Dermot and Sean evade their pursuers and manage to cross the border to safety in the Irish Free ...
Skin is based on a real-life incident that occurred in Condit's life when she dated Ira Einhorn, also known as the Unicorn Killer. Ira had murdered his ex-girlfriend, Holly Maddux, and hidden her corpse in his closet. [1] Condit, who began dating Einhorn, never found Maddux's corpse due to being on medication that hindered her sense of smell. [2]
Here, her family tree—featuring the Harris, Gopalan, and Emhoff families, all the extended family of Kamala Harris: Vice President Harris’s family tree. Design by Michael Stillwell.
The plot revolves around a member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (Pitt) who comes to the United States to obtain black market anti-aircraft missiles, but his plan is complicated by an Irish-American policeman (Ford), whom the IRA member has come to regard as family. [5] The film was released by Columbia Pictures on March 26, 1997. It ...
Maze is a prison film about the Maze Prison escape of 38 Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) prisoners in 1983. It was written and directed by Stephen Burke [1] and released on 22 September 2017. [2]
Photos of the two men looking at Leeds locations for the film are shown in Earnshaw's book. As part of his research for his character Mickey Rourke met some IRA members. For the priest character, Hodges said, "Priests can be so sanctimonious on the screen, and I didn't want a Barry Fitzgerald or a Bing Crosby.