Hunger
Director: Steve McQueen
Starring: Liam Cunningham, Michael Fassbender, Stuart Graham
Details: UK/Ireland / 96mins (15A).
It's all conceived with the bare minimum of dialogue - that is until Hunger's centrepiece: a fifteen minute-or-so scene involving Fassbender's Bobby Sands and Liam Cunningham's priest, playing Devil's Advocate to Sands's proposed suicide. The scene is almost one shot, and the dialogue has to be the very best to sustain it. It is, as Cunningham and Fassbender shoot the breeze before getting down to politics, morality and mortality in a beautifully written scene. What follows is all Sands, as he embarks on that 66-day nil by mouth, and McQueen doesn't allow the viewer anywhere to hide from the horror with Fassbender's emaciation and skin welts in constant close up. Hunger, despite the horror the prisoners are put through, isn't a one-sided treatise, either: McQueen leaves us in no doubt that Lohan hates his job, lingering on a distressed guard long enough for him to break down and shows a UDA supporter carrying a weak Sands to his cell like a baby. There isn't much of a story going on here, but that doesn't stop it packing an emotional punch.
Review by Gavin Burke
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