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Irish writer Graham Linehan gave the film a positive review in the British film magazine Neon, and said, "If you’re Irish, the film obviously carries a huge emotional punch. But if you’re British, and you have even an iota of interest in a country that, after all, is RIGHT BESIDE YOU, then I suggest you toddle along."
A young Irish woman becomes a Nazi spy. [7] 1946 Odd Man Out: Carol Reed: James Mason: A wounded Irish nationalist leader in Belfast attempts to evade police following a failed robbery. [8] (The group he belongs to is not named, but the IRA were the only Irish republican group active at the time.) 1947 The Quiet Man: John Ford John Wayne
My Life for Ireland (German: Mein Leben für Irland) is a 1941 Nazi German anti-British propaganda drama film produced in World War II. [1] Directed by Max W. Kimmich, it tells a story of an Irish nationalist family and their involvement in the Irish struggle of independence over two generations. [2]
In articles written for the New York-based Nation, Mitchel espoused proslavery thought and opposed Jewish emancipation in the United States. [50] [51] His views were similar to many other Young Ireland émigrés such as Thomas D'Arcy McGee, who defended American slavery while espousing Irish nationalism. [52]
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1981 Irish hunger strike: 2008 United Kingdom Canada Fifty Dead Men Walking: Kari Skogland: Crime, Drama, Thriller. Based on Martin McGartland's autobiography. 2009 United States Disappearing in America: Erik Rodgers: Drama. 2009 United Kingdom Ireland Five Minutes of Heaven: Oliver Hirschbiegel: Drama, Thriller.
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Nancy would be better known by her married name O'Rahilly, and her part in the Irish revolutionary period. Her husband, The O'Rahilly, was one of the leaders and the most senior casualty of 1916 Easter Rising. She was educated in the United States, before visiting Ireland, and later attended an Ursuline convent in Paris. [1]