Skip to main content

HUNGER (movie) directed by Steve McQueen

Hunger (movie) drected Steve McQueen.

(REVIEW BY CHRIS LEMIRE)

.

Hunger (2008) - Rotten Tomatoes

In telling the story of Irish Republican Army member Bobby Sands, who died in a Northern Ireland prison after a 66-day hunger strike in 1981, McQueen approaches his subject with vividly stomach-churning detail. Feces smeared on concrete cell walls, piles of half-eaten swill rotting in the corner, inmates dragged naked down the halls and beaten to a pulp ? it's all there and more, if you can stand it, since McQueen is practically pornographic in lingering on these shots of violence and squalor.

.

Hunger begins in near silence, as a prison guard (Stuart Graham) soaks his swollen and bloodied hands in water in the bathroom sink, looks sadly at himself in the mirror, then gets dressed and eats breakfast before yet another grueling day.

From there, the film unfolds in three segments. The first follows a defiant new inmate (Brian Milligan) who refuses to wear his assigned uniform, and instead goes naked like his fellow Republicans. His cellmate (Liam McMahon) educates him in the ways of protest, through making the most of bodily functions and smuggling rolled-up pieces of information in various orifices.

For even the most hardhearted, this is all difficult to endure and yet, there's an unmistakably self-conscious artfulness to even the most crass acts.

Part two introduces us to Sands himself, played with great confidence and guts by Michael Fassbender. While the previous section was practically wordless, this one's all talking, with Sands announcing his hunger strike to the Roman Catholic priest who's become his confidant (Liam Cunningham) and explaining his goal of making the British government recognize the IRA as a political organization.

Part three revels in watching him wither silently. Food is brought to him in the infirmary and he doesn't even bother looking at it. McQueen is just as certain in his depiction of Sands as a Christ figure ? the comparison is inescapable and rather heavy-handed, with Sands' stained bed sheet even calling to mind the Shroud of Turin.

Ultimately, Sands comes off as more of an idea, a martyr, than a fully fleshed-out person. And McQueen has made a film about him that's easier to admire than it is to like.

Hunger, an IFC Films release, is not rated but contains graphic violence, nudity and shocking imagery.

Verdict of Irish Parents Review English Curriculum; This is an adult film and not at all suitable for teenage viewers. Apart from the obviously upsetting and inappropriate scenes contained in the film, HUNGER also encourages and perpetuates anti-English feeling in a new generation which is trying hard to fight racism, not practise it.....