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The Magdalene Sisters [DVD] [2003]
 
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The Magdalene Sisters [DVD] [2003]

DVD ~ Eileen Walsh
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)
RRP: £17.99
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The Magdalene Sisters [DVD] [2003]
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The Magdalene Sisters [DVD] [2003] 4.8 out of 5 stars (28)
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Product details

  • Actors: Eileen Walsh, Dorothy Duffy, Nora-Jane Noone, Anne-Marie Duff, Geraldine McEwan
  • Directors: Peter Mullan
  • Writers: Peter Mullan
  • Producers: Alan J. Wands, Andrea Occhipinti, Ed Guiney, Frances Higson, Paddy Higson
  • Format: PAL
  • Language English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Momentum Pictures
  • DVD Release Date: 1 Sep 2003
  • Run Time: 115 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0000AZVEN
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 2,651 in DVD (See Bestsellers in DVD)

Reviews

Synopsis

Peter Mullen's shocking drama THE MAGDALENE SISTERS is based on real events that took place in Ireland from the 1960s until 1996 when an estimated 30,000 young women, considered by their families to have committed sexual sins, were sent away from their homes to earn penitence working in profit-making laundries run by the Sisters of Magdalene Order. However, the "acts" that lead to the girls miserable imprisonment were clearly not punishable. What's worse, the nuns were cruel money grabbers who worked the girls to the point of exhaustion, and used poor living conditions and psychological abuse to break and brainwash the girls into subservience. The awful treatment the nuns gave these innocent young women was terrifying and utterly disturbing.
Mullen designed the fictional characters in the film based on interviews with actual survivors of the laundries, working their stories into his plot. Margaret (Anne-Marie Duff) is a shy girl who is raped by her cousin at a wedding shaming her family, Patricia/Rose (Dorothy Duff) gets pregnant and her parents take her baby away from her, Bernadette (Nora-Jane Noone) is a pretty girl who is deemed "too flirtatious," and Crispina (Eileen Walsh) is a loving young mum whose children are forbidden to see her and are being raised by her sister. The imposing Sister Bridget (Geraldine McEwan) is pure evil, and will strike fear into the souls of MAGDALENE viewers. This expertly crafted, haunting film, presents Mullen's second feature film, following 1999's ORPHANS.

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28 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (28 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
31 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a must see, 22 Feb 2005
By A Customer
I can't believe this topic isn't more widely recognized. The film is brilliantly played, mostly by all new actresses. The film has helped put the Church in the spotlight and many women to talk about their pasts in these places.
Lots of other reviews tell you what it's about...I know it sounds terrible, but really it's a superbly done film on a topic you should have a lot of feelings about, especially people living here in the UK where these things happened until more recently than anyone would like to admit
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56 of 57 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Why fear hell when you're already there?, 22 Oct 2003
By Joseph Haschka (Glendale, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
Why fear hell when already there?

As if the Holy Roman Catholic Church hasn't had enough PR problems lately, now there's THE MAGDALENE SISTERS.

Based on a true story, this film follows the experiences of three young Irish woman thrust into a Magdalene Asylum, administered by the Catholic Church through the Sisters of Mercy (aka THE MAGDALENE SISTERS), for perceived sexual immorality. Margaret (Anne-Marie Duff), who dares cry "rape" after she's sexually assaulted by a cousin at a family wedding. Rose, who gives birth to an illegitimate child. Bernadette, already in an orphanage, who's just an outrageous flirt with the lads. In the asylum, the three join others, some having been detained for a lifetime, in a brutal 24/7 regimen of prayer, work, and sleep without contact with the outside world. The work involved 8-10 hours per day of unpaid toil, i.e. atonement for sin, in the institution's sweat shop laundry - a business that earned considerable money for the Church. The prisoners - for that's what they truly are - endure bad food, physical beatings, sexual abuse, psychological trauma, and abject humiliation at the hands of the nuns and priests.

The Magdalene Asylums were a feature of 20th century Ireland, places of incarceration reserved for "fallen" women, a flexible term that included anyone considered to be in moral peril. The plot of this film takes place in the early 1960s and stretches over four to five years. (The last Irish asylum was closed in 1996. It's estimated that approximately 30,000 women were incarcerated in these facilities over the decades. Interestingly, it was the advent of household washers and dryers that contributed to the end of the asylum laundries.)

Have no misconceptions, the plot of this devastating and emotionally powerful film is unrelentingly gritty. There's little happiness to be had by the three young women, brilliantly played by the three named actresses, and their fellow sufferers. Also superb in a supporting role is Geraldine McEwan as Sister Bridget, the asylum's manic Mother Superior, who loves old western films and the laundry's cash revenue nearly as much as her God, and who apparently harbors a deep hatred of female sexuality. And Eileen Walsh as Crispina, another unwed mother, who barely comprehends her trespass, and whose fate is achingly tragic.

THE MAGDALENE SISTERS was filmed in Dumfries, Scotland, rather than Ireland to avoid political opposition and controversy. The shock to the viewer is that such institutionalized cruelty could have existed in a modern, Western society until so recently. After all, we're not talking about repression of women in the Taliban's Afghanistan here.

Writer/Director Peter Mullan included in the cast, as Sister Augusta, a woman named Phyllis McMahon, a former nun in a Magdalene Asylum. When asked by Mullen what went so wrong in the asylums that nuns did these things, she answered:

"Absence of doubt. We had no doubts about what we did." The rationale of fanatics everywhere.

I was born and raised a Catholic, and "fell away" in young adulthood. THE MAGDALENE SISTERS made me angry. Without doubt, it also merits Oscar consideration in the Best Foreign Film category.

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30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Nun Better, 31 Aug 2003
By Mr. K. Mccready "Kev McCreadt" (Liverpool) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Possibly the film of the year. The Magdalene laundries operated in Ireland till 1996. "Fallen" women were taken into these institutions to wash the vestements and wimples of priests and nuns.

The story follows three women who enter one such institution.
One has a child out of wedlock, one feeling the first pangs of puberty, one raped by her cousin. We follow their lives inside, victim of the whims of the satantic Mother Superior (superbly played by Geraldine McEwan).

Although this sound dark-and it is, at times unbearably powerful-there are moments of dark humour inside. In these terms, I would compare it to One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest - I can pay it no higher compliment.

Writer director Peter Mullan (who also cameo's as one of the girl's Father) has crafted a small, powerful, angry, funny masterpiece. The film only loses it's way in the last 10 minutes, when we found out what happens to the girls after they leave the laundry. Although all the stories are based on real ones, this mix of fantasy and reality never really works.

This is not, as it's critics would have you believe a vicious piece of anti-catholic propaganda. It is enourmously respectful of faith and belief, it just points out as Graves said: "the true fiend rules in god's name."

Go and buy it. As a footnote, know that Magdalene laundries are still in existance in India and Eastern Europe.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Suberb and shocking
I had never heard of the Magdalene Asylums before watching this film and assumed that it was a generation thing. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Celtes

5.0 out of 5 stars harrowing
This film is not for the faint hearted.It is extremely harrowing, because it is all based on fact Shocking to think this went on until as recently as 1996. Read more
Published 8 months ago by happy go lucky

5.0 out of 5 stars Sobbingly Brilliant
Not one for the light-hearted, this film is so well made.

It touches on the quite un-known horrors of the women made to work for the rest of their lives, due to... Read more
Published 11 months ago by pinkfairyice

5.0 out of 5 stars Unbelievible but True
I thought that this sort of barbarism, ended in Victorian/Edwardian times. Who would beleive that treatment of this kind was still going on in mid Twentieth Century Ireland... Read more
Published 21 months ago by Mr. G. Holt

5.0 out of 5 stars Mind blowing
This film is harrowing to watch. The story of three girls sent to a Magdalen laundry, one for being raped by her cousin(where were the gardai? Read more
Published 23 months ago by S. HADAVI

5.0 out of 5 stars A masterpiece against Christian anti-women fundamentalism
Faust's Gretchen, Irish Catholic style. The girl is deprived of her child and sent to some nunnery where she is going to be a prisoner and a working slave for the comfort of the... Read more
Published on 11 Sep 2007 by Jacques COULARDEAU

5.0 out of 5 stars The horror of the Magdalene Sisters must never be forgotten
THE STORY IS SICK, SAD AND POWERFUL ON SO MANY LEVELS AND ALTHOUGH HORRIFIC, DOES NOT COME CLOSE TO THE HORRORS THAT WENT ON INSIDE OF THE LAUNDRIES. Read more
Published on 25 Aug 2007 by Ms. Mhairi F. Derby-pitt

5.0 out of 5 stars May Your God Go With You.
Based on a true story, "The Magdalene Sisters," with God and the State on their side is a sinister and disturbing story about a factory of humane misery hiding behind... Read more
Published on 20 Aug 2007 by A. Macrae

5.0 out of 5 stars magaline sisters
My god this film was true to life children placed in maladjusted Schools in the UK suffered the same fate as the young woman in this film, even thought the government would like... Read more
Published on 2 Jun 2007 by Mrs. J. Edson

5.0 out of 5 stars Education at its best
I saw this film at the cinema when it was first release, then bought it the other day. Watching it i was shocked and appalled all over again. Read more
Published on 3 Mar 2007 by Cm Strudwick

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