Simran Hans 

Black ’47 review – weak revenge drama set during the 1847 Irish famine

Stereotypical baddies lessen the impact of Lance Daly’s bleak historical thriller
  
  

‘Cowboy figure’ James Frecheville in Black ’47.
‘Cowboy figure’ James Frecheville in Black ’47. Photograph: Fastnet Films

Australian actor James Frecheville leads this thin, draggy revenge thriller about Ireland’s potato famine. Set in 1847 and playing out in both English and subtitled Gaelic, director Lance Daly’s film uses genre to tell the horrors of colonialism, including archaic tax laws that see decrepit houses de-roofed and Roman Catholics forced to “take the soup” or else starve. We witness these bleak, frostbitten scenes through the blank eyes of cowboy figure Feeney (Frecheville), on a one-man mission to avenge the death of his family.

It’s unfortunate that caricatured villains lessen the impact of the film’s upward punch. Freddie Fox’s smug, silvery-haired Officer Pope has a touch of Draco Malfoy about him, while Jim Broadbent’s Lord Kilmichael is so openly offensive that he feels like a punchline.

Watch a trailer for Black ’47.
 

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