Give Piece a
Chance
An Everlasting Piece finds its sharp humor amid the chaos of
If
you consider Northern Ireland to be a part of Ireland proper, then An
Everlasting Piece may easily be the best Irish film of the year (not
that the competition was too stiff...anyone remember The Closer You Get?).
If, on the other hand, you consider the six counties to be a part of the
Of course, perhaps one should
say "the best Irish/British-themed film of the year," since
the director is actually very American:
Set, according to an opening
title, "sometime during the 1980s" (but at least 1984, given that Stop
Making Sense is playing in theaters), the film swiftly sets the stage by
sweeping over rustic fields, past a mural of the Giant's Causeway and the
requisite armored cars and soldiers, to the strains of Talking Heads'
"Life During Wartime." We end up at a house that seems to be stranded
in the middle of a large empty lot, but handwritten notes that appear on-screen
quickly qualify things: That wall right behind the house is the border between
Catholic and Protestant communities, and that device all around the house that
looks like a giant soccer-goal net is actually there to deflect firebombs
hurled over the wall.
It is in this house that we meet
our protagonist, Colm (McEvoy), and his wacky family, which includes an aunt
(Pauline McLynn) so burdened with Catholic prudishness that she thinks
squeezing blackheads is "disgustin'...it's just so erotic" and a
mother (Ruth McCabe) who wears underwear on her head so that the nicotine from
her ever present cigarette won't stain her dye job.
And Colm? He's a barber in a mental institution
where virtually everyone on staff is named "Billy" and patients have
similar cannibalistic tastes to Mike Tyson. It's a mostly Protestant place, but
Colm nonetheless manages to strike up a friendship with his coworker George
(Brķan F. O'Byrne), an aspiring poet; the friendship is sealed when the two
manage to rhyme the words "Hades," "Mercedes," "Warren
Beatty's," and "
Soon, opportunity strikes in the
unlikeliest of places: A man (Billy Connolly) committed for trying literally to
scalp his customers is revealed to own the only hairpiece company in
Wacky high jinks ensue, but the
comedic situations are never at the expense of the tense environment that
surrounds them all. Witness the very real security checkpoint bearing the sign
"Security forces regret any inconvenience or delay. Blame the
terrorists"; or the scene in which Colm and George must talk their way out
of a gunpoint confrontation with masked IRA men on a country road; or the
graphic murals representing each side in violent, almost fascistic terms; or,
on a smaller scale, the vicar who insists that any wig he purchases must not be
made from Catholic hair. Colm and George's friendship frequently threatens to
explode, and even when one of them has the inevitable epiphany in which he
realizes that the other is his equal, it's tempered with an edge.
The film does suffer from a weak
third act, no doubt due to McEvoy's inexperience as a writer. A tough
Protestant cop introduced as an antagonist who vows to conduct the most
thorough searches "since that guy did dem things to de babies in de
Bible" is quickly written off with a ludicrous (and needlessly scatological)
scene shortly before the deus ex machina climax. Similarly, an angry deadbeat
customer who supposedly killed several Catholics fails in the end to pay off in
as big a way as he should. And Levinson's touch is a little uneven, which
perhaps is not surprising from the man who made both the brilliantly prescient Wag
the Dog and the utter dreck that was Jimmy Hollywood. However, the
humor of McEvoy's dialogue is wonderful, and though Levinson's camera lingers
on bodily function gags longer than it needs to (Cows defecating! Hoo-hah!),
and he tries to push the movie toward sentimentality at the end, McEvoy's
script ultimately defies him on that score.