With a minimum of effort you can picture the brass at Fox Searchlight, eager grins
plastered across their faces, preparing for the imminent release of what is almost
certain to be this year's The Full Monty. Like that wildly popular U.K. import, Waking
Ned Devine has a terrific ensemble cast composed of no actor American audiences are
likely to recognize (Bannen was in Flight of the Phoenix way back in 1966), lilting
accents, and nude men doing remarkably silly things in the name of money. Unfortunately,
it's not all that (though, come to think of it, The Full Monty wasn't really all
that, either). Predicated on the slimmest of notions, this debut by Jones is so cuddly-cute
in its desire to be pleasing that it's all but transparent; what you can see of it
is cobbled together out of some decidedly rancorous clichés. In Waking Ned Devine,
the Irish are dual-fisted, opportunistic whiskey machines out to score the big haul
in the name of village solidarity. They're also wildly funny, eccentric, and lovable.
These polar extremes are not mutually exclusive in Jones' world, obviously. It's
a County Cork crock, to be sure, but Jones and his cast serve it up in high style,
milking it for all it's worth. Bannen and Kelly play Jackie O'Shea and Michael Sullivan,
a pair of aging Irish scalawags who wend their way through their twilight years sunning
themselves on the rocky beaches of their Tully More home and playing ñ as does
everyone else ñ the Irish National Lottery. When a local resident ñ the
elderly and besainted Ned Devine ñ arrives at the winning combination and then
promptly expires, the men take it upon themselves to liberate the ticket from the
deceased, defraud the lottery board, and share the winnings among the 52 assorted
townspeople. Chaos, as they say, ensues. On its face, the film has a touch of the
old Ealing comedies about it, but for all the mugging and blarney and frothy pints
of Guinness, Waking Ned Devine is as thin as old David Kelly's sunken chest. At its
worst, it reinforces those hoary Emerald Isle stereotypes of the scheming, drunken
Irishman; at its best, it's an ingratiating, weepy testament to the resourcefulness
of those zany Irish. Either way, it's not really all that much. It does, however,
have some wonderful turns from both Bannen and Kelly, as well as Dromey as the town's
reviled curmudgeon. Jones, to his credit, directs with a sure hand and makes the
most of some of the world's most gorgeous geography, filling downtime (of which there
is little ñ the film boasts some superb editing) with sweeping, panoramic shots
of the rugged Isle of Man coastline (where the film was shot despite its Irish setting),
velvet green cliffs rushing to meet the crashing breakers below. Sodden, middle-of-the-lane
humor of this sort has never bothered me before ñ I just think perhaps the Irish
might enjoy being the subject of a film with slightly less alcohol and a smidgen
more honesty to it for once.
--Marc Savlov
Capsule Reviews
Waking Ned Devine 
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