D: Paul Quinn; with Aidan Quinn, James Caan, Stephen Rea, John Cusack, Moya
Farrelly, Jacob Tierney, Colm Meaney, Moira Deady, Susan Almgren, Pauline Hutton.
(R, 120 min.)
Now I know why my father was so insistent I carry a handkerchief on my person
at all times. This Quinn family production (brother Declan Quinn tackles the cinematography
chores, Paul directs, and Aidan co-stars) is as weepy a number as you're likely to
see this summer, a heartbreaker of the first order and also a sterling example of
what poor, downtrodden brother Aidan can do when he finally gets his hands on a decent
script. Forget clinkers like Crusoe, Benny & Joon, and Avalon, this is what fans
of the underutilized actor have been waiting for since his Reckless debut 17 years
ago. A long wait, sure, but sweeter for it, all the same. Chicago high school teacher
Kieran Johnson's (Caan) life is a mess: His elderly mother Fiona is vegetating in
the upstairs bedroom of his divorcée sister (Almgren); his nephew, Jack (Tierney),
is edging toward reform-school, and his own laborings as an educator earn little
more than classroom taunts and barbs. While lecturing Jack in the family garage,
Kieran accidentally uncovers a moldering old photo of a happy young couple tucked
into a book of Irish poems that was inscribed, apparently, to his namesake, the father
he never knew. Taking this as a sign (as much as Caan the actor can be said to take
anything as a sign), he flies off to old Ireland with Jack in tow to uncover the
mystery of this other Kieran. Once there, he is told the sorrowful tale of his sire
by a B&B manager (Deady), and the film flashes back to 1939. It's then and there
that Kieran O'Day (Quinn), a "poorhouse bastard" with a shambling gait and a tree-stump
neck that would do Henry Rollins proud, meets upper-crust lassie Fiona Flynn, who's
been recently tossed out of boarding school for offending the nuns. After taking
in a local dance during which a tipsy Kieran chivalrously defends the lusty Fiona
after a pair of low-life twins accost her, the pair begin toppling down the slippery
slope of love. Naturally, everyone else in the village is dead set against the romance,
citing everything from moral turpitude (Rea as the libidinous village priest is especially,
ah, charming) to Kieran's financial nonexistence (by day he tills the soil outside
his foster parents' house). There are bright spots in this admittedly dreary Irish
tragedy, though. The always reliable John Cusack shows up as a photographer for Life
magazine, zipping in on a single-seater Cessna and helping the young lovers woo each
other on a starlit beach, while Meaney, back in the real world, is interesting as
the mincing innkeeper. As Kieran's history is told over the course of several afternoons,
young Jack strikes up a friendship with a forward-thinking young village flirt. And
Caan, stoic though he may be (it's still difficult to shake the image of Rollerball's
Jonathan E. after all these years) grapples with emotions. The modern-day bracketing
works only half as well as the flashbacks, unfortunately. Quinn is astounding, though,
as young Kieran, and Farrelly has more spark to her than a thousand Zippos. Altogether
winning in a teary-eyed sort of way (Declan Quinn's cinematography is nothing short
of brilliant), this is a multi-handkerchief affair, and a grand return to form for
Quinn brother Aidan.
3.0 stars
--Marc Savlov
Full Length Reviews
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Capsule Reviews
This Is My Father 
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