Hunger
Review
by Anthony Morris
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In the early
1980s a string of protests rocked Belfast Maze Prison as IRA prisoners
demanded to be treated as political prisoners and receive special
privileges.
Their actions included "dirty" protests
(refusing to wash, smearing the walls of their cells with their own
excrement) and "blanket" protests (refusing to wear anything but a
blanket).
Eventually it escalates to a string of hunger strikes
by various members, including the one that led to the death of Bobby
Sands (Michael Fassbender).
The first half of this film
dramatising those events verges on being a silent film, as we see the
back-and-forth of the situation : the prison guards living in fear out
on the streets, the prisoners being abused inside the prison, with the
cycle of abuses ramping itself up to brutal bashings and killings.
Then
we get, what might as well be, a fifteen minute play filmed pretty much
in one take of a conversation between Sands and his priest (Liam
Cunningham) which lays out with compelling argument and at times
chilling logic the case for Sands calmly starving himself to
death.
We then see him go on to do in it in the same
clinical, almost emotionless, detail that the earlier scenes have taken
to examine earlier horrors.
Hunger is a gripping, utterly absorbing (and at times appalling) film that won't be easily forgotten.
4.5 out
of 5
Hunger
Australian release: 6th November,
2008
Official
Site: Hunger
Cast: Michael Fassbender, Liam Cunningham
Director: Steve McQueen
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