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Plot

John Boorman, who won the 1998 Cannes Film Festival's Direction award for this film, previously won the same Cannes award almost three decades earlier for his Leo the Last (1969) about an alienated aristocrat in a London slum. Shot in widescreen color (but printed in sharp black-and-white), The General is a biographical portrait of ruthless Irish crime lord Martin Cahill, shot down outside his home by a single assassin on August 18, 1994. After this opening, the film then unfolds as a lengthy flashback of the events that led to his death, sketching in the raw beginnings of the youthful Martin (Eamonn Owens of The Butcher Boy) and moving into the Dublin slum of Hollyfield to show the adult Cahill (Brendan Gleeson) and his link to a local cop, Inspector Ned Kenny (Jon Voight). Various thefts enable Cahill to support his wife Frances (Maria Doyle Kennedy), his four children, and his sister-in-law Tina (Angeline Ball). As the years pass, Cahill rises as a mobster, bamboozling cops, constructing airtight alibis, pulling off a near-impossible jewel heist, and setting up a menage a trois with Frances and Tina. (Both actresses were seen previously in Alan Parker's The Commitments).
MPAA Rating:
R for violence and pervasive language.
Genre(s):
Drama
Run Time:
123min.
Theatrical Release Date:
10/14/1991
DVD Release Date:
07/20/1999
Distributor(s):
Sony
Director(s):
Themes:
Crime Sprees,Rise and Fall Stories
Tone:
Humorous,Matter-of-Fact,Stylized,Cynical,Wry
Keywords:
Ireland,assassination,gangster,humor,menage-a-trois,police-detective
Country of Origin:
USA (12-18-1998)
Language:
English
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