This Is My Father
Paul Quinn's film resonates as a sincere, heartfelt effort, even if the
Gaelic-American tale rides long and complex. James Caan is gruffly resilient as
frustrated schoolteacher Kieran, who after a chance discovery sets off for
Ireland to trace the identity of the father he has never known and get a new
lease on life. As a favor to his sister, he takes along his peevish, likewise
unsettled nephew Jack (Jacob Tierney), and together they journey to a remote
Irish village, where they unearth the story of their lineage and in the process
experience life-affirming epiphanies.
But This Is My Father is less about Kieran's spiritual odyssey than it
is about his father's romantic quest. As sputtered in flashback segments by an
old Gypsy innkeeper, Kieran learns that dad (a thick-necked Aidan Quinn) was a
poor sod farmer involved in a "Romeo and Juliet" love affair with the fiery
daughter (a sparkling Moya Farrelly) of his landowner (an angular Gina Moxley
as the bitter widow Flynn). Tragedy, romance, and realization lie at each
toggle of the story's chronology-hopping framework, and though the
craftsmanship is at times stunning, there's too much going on across time and
distance. The amazing ensemble cast also includes John Cusack, Brendan Gleeson,
Colm Meaney, Stephen Rea, and Pete Postlethwaite. At the Avon.
-- Tom Meek
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