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Song for a Raggy Boy

  • 2003
  • TV-MA
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
5K
YOUR RATING
Song for a Raggy Boy (2003)
Coming-of-AgePeriod DramaDramaHistory

The true story of a single teacher's courage to stand up against an untouchable prefect's sadistic disciplinary regime and other abuse in a Catholic Reformatory and Industrial School in 1939... Read allThe true story of a single teacher's courage to stand up against an untouchable prefect's sadistic disciplinary regime and other abuse in a Catholic Reformatory and Industrial School in 1939 Ireland.The true story of a single teacher's courage to stand up against an untouchable prefect's sadistic disciplinary regime and other abuse in a Catholic Reformatory and Industrial School in 1939 Ireland.

  • Director
    • Aisling Walsh
  • Writers
    • Patrick Galvin
    • Aisling Walsh
    • Kevin Byron Murphy
  • Stars
    • Aidan Quinn
    • Iain Glen
    • Marc Warren
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Aisling Walsh
    • Writers
      • Patrick Galvin
      • Aisling Walsh
      • Kevin Byron Murphy
    • Stars
      • Aidan Quinn
      • Iain Glen
      • Marc Warren
    • 47User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 14 wins & 6 nominations total

    Photos74

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Aidan Quinn
    Aidan Quinn
    • William Franklin
    Iain Glen
    Iain Glen
    • Brother John
    Marc Warren
    Marc Warren
    • Brother Mac
    Dudley Sutton
    Dudley Sutton
    • Brother Tom
    Alan Devlin
    • Father Damian
    Stuart Graham
    Stuart Graham
    • Brother Whelan
    John Travers
    John Travers
    • Liam Mercier 636
    Chris Newman
    • Patrick Delaney 743
    Andrew Simpson
    Andrew Simpson
    • Gerard Peters 458
    Mark Butler
    • Downey 913
    Bernard Manning
    • Rogers 855
    Samuel Bright
    • Ryan 126
    Robert Sheehan
    Robert Sheehan
    • O Reilly 58
    Caoimhin 'Tojo' Barra Doherty
    • Murphy 338
    Michael McGee
    • Lynch 76
    John Collins
    • O Connor 252
    Michael Scott
    • Flynn 144
    Robert White
    • Galvin 544
    • Director
      • Aisling Walsh
    • Writers
      • Patrick Galvin
      • Aisling Walsh
      • Kevin Byron Murphy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    7.55K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    8MOscarbradley

    A terrible catalogue of abuse

    The catalogue of abuse perpetrated by the clergy in Ireland against the children in their care has long been in the public domain. Tentatively only now is the cinema beginning to address the issue, firstly with Peter Mullan's "The Magdalene Sisters", which wavered between broad comedy and tragedy to disconcerting effect and now with Aisling Walsh's superb "Song for a Raggy Boy", an altogether bleaker affair; indeed at times this is virtually unwatchable so intense is the brutality it depicts.

    Aidan Quinn is the first lay-teacher in an Irish reform school run by the Christian Brothers, (hardly an apt term), in the Ireland of 1939. The system of abuse he encounters is so all encompassing that he seems powerless to do anything about it despite winning the approval of the boys. This is a deeply troubling, (and in the end, very moving) film beautifully directed by the young Irish director Aisling Walsh whose lack of technique is all the more unsettling.

    It is also superbly played, in particular by the boys, non-professionals all and by Quinn, Iain Glen as the sadistic and evil brother at the centre, Marc Warren as the weak-willed, sexually driven brother, (his is the most emotionally complex character), and by that great and undervalued British actor Dudley Sutton. Flashbacks to Quinn's part in the Spanish Civil War may be ill-judged but this remains a spare, unsettling film which should be mandatory viewing for Catholics everywhere.
    10johnnyd2

    A great film made brilliant by the sheer power of acting

    A great film made brilliant by the sheer power of acting. I have never experienced anything quite like it. We have here a film, a story, so convincingly told that something inside me wishes it were not true and that the abuse of authority that this film exposes does not still exist in the political and religious leaders of toady. The story is that of Franklin, a teacher in an Irish reformatory school who takes up the cause of the ill treated and neglected children being brutalised by Brother John, a rising star in the catholic church hierarchy, with the tacit approval of the other brothers, each labouring over their own guilty secrets. Of course the story is a harrowing one, and does not spare the viewers feelings, at times I wondered why I was putting myself through this gruelling history lesson, but than I knew, that guiding me through the film, like a guardian angel, is the consumate acting of absoutly all the cast. I knew they would see me through. Aidan Quinn and Iain Glen are magnificently convincing both giving the best perfprmances of their careers to date. The young boys are all wonderful in their roles. Their acting is pure realism, such mature performances from young teenagers are a glowing tribute to the directing of Aisling Walsh
    9j-vincent-2

    Brilliant film -literally hard hitting but a touching 'based on' true story

    I cannot believe some of the negative comments about this film. The acting is strong from the whole cast, including the children and that is a rarity these days. It touches on the awful side of Irish Catholic reform schools and the brutality and abuse depicted here is authentic and true, based on accounts and evidence which has come to light in recent years. It is emotional at times and hard to take but this is a superb film and its comparisons with films such as Dead Poet's are justified. 9 out of 10, not quite perfect but very close. The acting is brilliant and Iain Glenn and Aidann Quinn stand out as do the two main boys in the story. You may be shocked and appalled by some of the scenes but it is worth watching and was one of the best films of 2003.
    PeterJordan

    A neatly packaged if somewhat overtly concise perspective on Irish Industrial schools

    I'd been skirting past this one in the video shop for ages wondering whether it was gonna be too depressing and harrowingly sad to sit through.

    And before continuing I have to say I love the Irish characters that Aidan Quinn has created from Playboys, thru This is My father and Harry Boland in Michael Collins - all characters you can empathize with and truly feel their pain, largely, it must be said, because of the projection of Quinns acting.

    The only Irish "reform school" I've ever visited is the building that used to house Letterfrack Industrial School in Co Galway, now (somewhat ironically considering some of the scenes in SFaRB) a fine arts furniture college. But to say that the building is still haunted by the ghosts of the boys and the pain and abuse inflicted there is an understatement. It literally oozes and sweats from the very walls of the former institution, defying every admirable attempt by the current education guardians to drag it into the present and positively project its glorious current use.

    And so, whilst what is effectively a "year in the life" of this particular unidentified industrial school, does manage to capture in a nutshell much of this pain, and instill in the audience a huge anger at what was perpetuated in these places in both the name of reform and religion, somewhere in the back of ones mind there is a discomfort that it's all being just a bit too neatly packaged, summarized and concluded for the benefit of Hollywood and the happy ending with a massive nod to Dead Poets Society when in reality, as still continues to be daily documented in the Irish courts and tribunals of Inquiry and media reports into such abuse, this was not and sadly never would be something that one brave and progressive teacher might have hope to take on and buck the system - As the tragic caption at the end points out, this system of education and authority with all it's abuses persisted in Ireland right up to 1984 and along it way produced such brilliant and brave people Don Baker, Paddy Doyle (The God Squad), Colm O'Gorman and Mannix Flynn but equally claimed as victims such brilliant and capable people as Noel Browne, and probably most tragically, the graveyard and unmarked graves behind Letterfrack college bears testament to the many many young boys that shed their very lives to these institutions - So to try to imply (for whatever feel good factor and positive connotations it gains) that one man may have successfully stood up to this system during the first year of the "Emergency" in 1939/40 and everything was hunky Dorey after that and the authorities and the church sat up and took notice, is just too syrupy of a picture and a quick fix solution when one is sadly aware that the tragic reality is far removed and some 50 odd years away from that - and whilst it was admittedly a very good picture, this simplistic portrayal of a huge and continuing Irish problem, served to tarnish rather than endow the film as a whole.
    10patrickduncan609

    Men may cry.

    An outstanding film from Ireland that is playing to strongly moved and even angry audiences in many parts of Europe as well as competing at the box office in its own territory favourably with such more obviously commercial movies as Intermission and Veronica Guerin. It has won either jury or audience awards at Ghent, Copenhagen, Cherbourg and Slovenia festivals. It tackles the tough and difficult-to-film subject of child abuse and manages to uplift your emotions before devestating and dashing them. All the performances, particularly those from Iain Glen as the sadist priest Brother John and from John Travers as the lead boy Mercier are outstanding and achieving widespread recognition, and many people think this is Aidan Quinn's best role ever. Skillfully and humanely handled by director Aisling Walsh, the film has more conviction than others in its family of films such as The Magdalene Sisters or Conspiracy of Silence and deserves to be seen anywhere it hasn't yet received a distribution. Anyone still interested in honest, highly moving drama or anyone whose youth was not a bed of roses will appreciate this film. An unusual film in that, just possibly, men may cry at it.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Film debut of Robert Sheehan.
    • Quotes

      Brother Mac: Your sentence here is two and a half years. Truant thirty five time this year, caught robbing five times. How old are you?

      Patrick Delaney 743: Thirteen and a half.

      Brother Mac: You're no saint. That's some history for a boy of thirteen. From now on, Delaney, you will be known as 743. That's the number allocated to you and you alone.

    • Connections
      Featured in Song for a Raggy Boy: Behind the Scenes (2003)

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Song for a Raggy Boy?Powered by Alexa
    • Why were the Police not informed of a murder taking place?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 22, 2003 (Denmark)
    • Countries of origin
      • Ireland
      • Denmark
      • United Kingdom
      • Spain
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Los Ninos de San Judas
    • Filming locations
      • County Cork, Ireland
    • Production companies
      • Subotica
      • Moviefan Scandinavia A/S
      • Zoma Films Ltd.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $783,544
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 34 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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