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I Am Belfast
Description
A poetic visual depiction and exploration of Belfast and its citizens, told by Belfast-born documentarian Mark Cousin. It's an emotional journey through the rich, complex and often tragic history of the Northern Irish controversial but inspiring capital.
A poetic visual depiction and exploration of Belfast and its citizens, told by Belfast-born documentarian Mark Cousin. It's an emotional journey through the rich, complex and often tragic history of the Northern Irish controversial but inspiring capital.
Actors:
Mark Cousins,
Richard Buick,
Felicity McKee,
Simon Millar,
Helena Bereen,
Shane McCaffrey,
Frank Cannon
Mark Cousins
3 May 1965, Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK
Richard Buick
17 August 1976, Ballymena, Northern Ireland, UK
Felicity McKee
Simon Millar
27 March 1976, Belfast, County Down, Northern Ireland, UK
Helena Bereen
Shane McCaffrey
3 May 1972, Ballymena, Co. Antrim, Northern Ireland, UK
Frank Cannon
Genre:
Documentary
Country:
United Kingdom
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Mark Cousins
3 May 1965, Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK
Richard Buick
17 August 1976, Ballymena, Northern Ireland, UK
Felicity McKee
Simon Millar
27 March 1976, Belfast, County Down, Northern Ireland, UK
Helena Bereen
Shane McCaffrey
3 May 1972, Ballymena, Co. Antrim, Northern Ireland, UK
Frank Cannon
April 08, 2016
While it evokes memories of a British Transport short, director Mark Cousins still crafts a perceptive paean to his hometown ...
Times (UK)
April 07, 2016
A visual meandering through the scarred city which unearths painful history -- and poetry.April 10, 2016
Cousins offers perhaps his most eccentric docu-essay yet, an impressionistic portrait of his home town, with Helena Bereen playing a regal personification of the spirit of place.April 07, 2016
A refreshingly hopeful depiction of a place habitually represented in cinema as a battleground of sectarian violence.April 08, 2016
This is an admiring portrait of the city but it's also tinged with sadness.January 03, 2017
At a time when filmmakers have been hesitant to engage with the difficult legacies of Belfast's past, Cousins provides a timely intervention while pointing to a future where all the city's inhabitants could take pride in the spaces... they inhabit.April 08, 2016
The city would not be itself without its humorous fatalism. We're all going to die. All films on Belfast end with Van Morrison.April 08, 2016
Cousins doesn't ignore the bloodshed and sectarian violence (the pub bombings, the killings, the evictions) in the city's recent past but he also has a genius for finding the poetry and humour in everyday street scenes.April 08, 2016
A complex and heartfelt evocation of a divided city.April 04, 2016
A boldly messy and impressionistic film.April 07, 2016
A valuable piece of work.