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So This Is Christmas review – most wonderful time of the year in a small Irish town | Movies

a A modest film with modest ambitions. This documentary paints a portrait of a small Irish town at Christmas, touching on what the Christmas season means to them through interviews with various residents about their lives. She is a single mother with three children, and although she is currently sober, she used to have a drinking problem. A young widow contemplates her first Christmas with her two sons in the absence of her beloved late wife. There is a cheerful older gentleman honing his reading skills and an older woman who remembers a time when their small community was ruled by a few male authorities in positions of power.

All of these people's stories are as gently persuasive as a conversation you might have had on a bus or in a bar. The unifying principle of this documentary is that they're all part of the same town at Christmas, and this is a fairly light-touch framework. This is not a portrait with a complex subject matter, the mood is strictly observational. But beneath that wall-of-the-wall impression, there's a sense of a hidden guiding hand that paints a particular image of rural Ireland's inhabitants. Ironically stoic, he encounters terrible life events and common hardships with good humor and admirable courage. . In other words, it is a selective portrayal of a particular type of person, juxtaposed with the so-called most wonderful time of the year.

Although it is a nonfiction film, it builds on the tradition of information fiction such as A Christmas Carol and It's a Wonderful Life, in that it builds on the viewer's empathy for the poor and disadvantaged and their struggles. , further inspired by the filmmaker. Festive background. For the unique people interviewed here, such festivities are hardly necessary.

'So This Is Christmas' will be held at Bertha Dockhouse in London from December 13th.

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