Hidden Agenda (1990 film)

Hidden Agenda

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Ken Loach
Produced by Eric Fellner
Written by Jim Allen
Starring
Music by Stewart Copeland
Cinematography Clive Tickner
Edited by Jonathan Morris
Distributed by Hemdale Film Corporation
Release dates
November 21, 1990
Running time
108 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

Hidden Agenda (1990), directed by Ken Loach, is a political thriller about British state terrorism during the Northern Irish Troubles that depicts the fictional assassination of an American civil rights lawyer.

Plot

The film unfolds with an Orange walk on The Twelfth, and a tape being handed to an American human rights activist, which becomes his death warrant. It begins with a quote from Margaret Thatcher insisting that Northern Ireland is part of Britain. It ends with one from a former British intelligence agent, stating, "There are two laws running this country: one for the security forces and the other for the rest of us." [1]

Investigator Peter Kerrigan (Cox), assisted by Ingrid Jessner (McDormand), investigates the killing of Paul Sullivan (Dourif), an American civil rights lawyer and political activist in Northern Ireland, whilst he was accompanied by a Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) sympathiser. The investigation reveals that the two men were shot without warning. A mysterious tape recording surfaces, made by a Captain Harris, an ex-army intelligence officer, now in hiding, of senior military leaders and Conservative Party politicians discussing how they arranged the rise to power of Margaret Thatcher. Eventually, Harris gives a copy of the tape to Jessner, but British security forces kill Harris, and blame his death on the IRA. Kerrigan is blackmailed into silence about the conspiracy. Jessner still has the tape, but without Harris to authenticate it, the recording can be dismissed as a forgery.

Cast

Production

The production was originally set up at Columbia Pictures in 1987, when David Puttnam ran the studio. After Puttnam was ousted, Loach had to find new financial backing, and eventually found it with John Daly who ran Hemdale Film Corporation.[2]

Reception

Critical response

Hidden Agenda was praised for its honesty and complexity,[3] as well as its resonance.[4] It was criticised for a simplistic view of the Northern Ireland Troubles as an anti-colonial war and for portraying the Troubles as an adjunct to British rather than Irish politics.[5]

Rotten Tomatoes retrospectively collected 18 reviews and gave the film a score of 83%.[6]

Awards

Hidden Agenda won the Jury Prize at the 1990 Cannes Film Festival[7] and was nominated for Best European Film at the Goya Awards. At the Festival press conference, the Northern Irish critic Alexander Walker publicly denounced the film as IRA propaganda.[8]

References

  1. Hidden Agenda (1990) Review/Film; Seeking Truths in Northern Ireland
  2. Gritten, David (1991-01-01). "Ken Loach's Agenda Is to Rile the British Establishment : Movies: The activist director, relatively inactive during the Thatcher years, tackles the issue of Northern Ireland in 'Hidden Agenda.'". Los Angeles Times.
  3. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/movies/videos/hiddenagendarhinson_a0a9c9.htm
  4. http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9C0CE0DB143FF932A15752C1A966958260
  5. Shooting to Kill: Filmmaking and the “Troubles” in Northern Ireland, Brian M’llroy, Trowbridge, Wiltshire, 1998 pp. 93–95, 97–98.
  6. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1032750-hidden_agenda/
  7. "Festival de Cannes: Daddy Nostalgia". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-08-04.
  8. Walker, Alexander. Icons in the Fire (London, 2004) pp. 131–132.

External links

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