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Evelyn

Evelyn

  • Status: Released
  • 30-09-2002
  • Runtime: 92 min
  • Score: 6.361
  • Vote count: 97

Desmond Doyle is devastated when his wife abandons their family on the day after Christmas. His unemployment, and the fact that there is no woman in the house to care for the children—Evelyn, Dermot and Maurice—make it clear to the authorities this is an untenable situation. The Catholic Church and the Irish courts decide to put the Doyle children into Church-run orphanages.

Pierce Brosnan

Desmond Doyle

Aidan Quinn

Nick Barron

Julianna Margulies

Bernadette Beattie

Stephen Rea

Michael Beattie

John Lynch

Senior Counsel Mr. Wolfe

Sophie Vavasseur

Evelyn Doyle

Alan Bates

Thomas Connolly

Niall Beagan

Dermot Doyle

Hugh McDonagh

Maurice Doyle

Mairead Devlin

Charlotte Doyle

Frank Kelly

Henry Doyle

Clare Mullen

Mrs. Daisley

Alvaro Lucchesi

Inspector Logan

Garrett Keogh

District Judge

Daithi O'Suilleabhain

Brother Eustace

Andrea Irvine

Sister Brigid

Marian Quinn

Sister Theresa

Karen Ardiff

Sister Felicity

Bosco Hogan

Father O'Malley

Des Braiden

Fergal

Sorcha Herlihy

Mary

Lauren Carpenter

Annette Farrell

Lauren O'Connell

Lauren

Hugh Grogan

Pub Musician

Peter Fowl

Pub Musician

Gail Fitzpatrick

Miss Gilhooly

Pat McGrath

Gamekeeper

Mark Lambert

Minister of Education

Conor Evans

Justice Ferris

Eamon Rohan

Justice Hall

Alan Barry

Justice McLaughlin

Brian McGrath

Hugh Canning

Mick Nolan

Honest Joe O'Leary

Luke Hayden

Irish Times Reporter

Don Foley

Justice Lynch

Bill Golding

Justice Daley

Sally

Slippery Sam

Stuart Clark

Children's Court Usher (uncredited)

Peter McGinn

I recently watched this after first seeing it maybe ten years ago. It wasn’t quite as good as I remembered. I mean, I like it okay, but without Pierce Brosnan in it, I am not sure I would have stayed through it. It is a harmless enough story, based on fact, about an Irishman who likes his drink (bordering on a stereotype maybe, says this Irish reviewer who rarely drinks) and whose wife gets fed up with her life when he loses his job. She takes off and, unlike what usually happens here in the good old USA, she leaves the kids behind, the children’s grandmother is so unimpressed with him she turns him in to the Society for the protection of children, who promptly take his children away. Again, in this country grandma probably would have tried for custody herself. Irish law says that if the mother isn’t dead, he needs her permission to get the children back. You can guess the rest. It is a tad sentimental and weirdly religious, highlighting both a mean nun but also showing a daughter absorbing the nun’s teachings which helps their case. But Julianna Marguiles is also very good, so turn a blind eye to the soppy story and Its predictability, and let the fine acting roll over you.