The Rising of the Moon (film)
7.2 /10 1 Votes
Duration | 7/10 Genre Comedy, Drama Language English | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Writer Lady Augusta Gregory , Michael J. McHugh , Frank S. Nugent , Frank OConnor Release date 10 August 1957 (1957-08-10) Cast (Mickey J. - the poitín maker (1st Episode)), (The Police Sergeant), (The Inspector), (The Old Man), (Mickey J. - the poitín maker (1st Episode)), Tony Quinn (Andrew Rourke - Station Master (2nd Episode))Similar movies The Italian Job , Love & Savagery , The Iron Mask , The Countess Died of Laughter , The Good, the Bad and the Ugly , Paddington Tagline Actually filmed in the Emerald Isle! |
The rising of the moon preview clip
The Rising of the Moon is a 1957 Irish anthology film directed by John Ford. It consists of three episodes all set in Ireland:
Contents
- The rising of the moon preview clip
- Limerick city the rising of the moon 1957
- The Majesty of the Law
- A Minutes Wait
- 1921
- Cast
- References


Limerick city the rising of the moon 1957
The Majesty of the Law

Police Inspector Dillon (Cyril Cusack) reluctantly sets out walking through the countryside to see an old friend, Dan O'Flaherty (Noel Purcell). Along the way, he encounters Mickey J. (Jack MacGowran), a poitín maker (bootlegger) who, fortunately for him, is not Dillon's target today, but accompanies Dillon to O'Flaherty's stone cottage where Dillon serves O'Flaherty a warrant for striking Phelim O'Feeney. While they are all congenially drinking and socializing inside O'Flaherty's cottage, O'Flaherty refuses to pay the fine, as he feels he has done nothing wrong, nor will he allow O'Feeney to pay it for him. Instead, he heads off to prison.
A Minute's Wait

A train pulls up to the Dunfaill station in County Kerry, where Paddy Morrisey (Jimmie O'Dea) announces there will be "a minute's wait". The passengers and crew crowd into the bar for refreshments, served by Pegeen Mallory (Maureen Potter). Later, Paddy finally proposes to his longtime girlfriend Pegeen.

Mrs. Falsey (May Craig) chats with her old friend Barney Domigan (Harold Goldblatt), while her niece Mary Ann MacMahon (Maureen Connell) becomes acquainted with his son Christy (Godfrey Quigley). Domigan is on his way to arrange a marriage between Christy and a young woman with a substantial dowry. Mrs. Falsey persuades him to change his mind by informing him that the U.S. Army has awarded Mary Ann $10,000 for her father's death in battle. The young couple, unaware of this development, insist they will only marry each other.

Meanwhile, the train is repeatedly delayed, much to the befuddlement of an older English couple (Anita Sharp-Bolster and Michael Trubshawe). They are first displaced from their first class compartment to make way for a prize-winning goat. Then, they have to share their new compartment with lobsters intended for the bishop's golden jubilee. Finally, the bar receives a phone call asking that the train add on another car needed to accommodate a hurling team whose bus has broken down nearby after a match. When the English couple finally get off for some tea, they are left behind when the train finally departs.
1921
Sean Curran (Donal Donnelly) awaits his execution in Galway prison by the British during the "Black and Tan War". This is very unpopular with the Irish public who consider him a hero. A sizable crowd of nuns and other demonstrators continually parade around, chanting the rosary. The British warden (Joseph O'Dea) allows two "nuns" (Doreen Madden and Maureen Cusack), one of them claiming to be Curran's grieving "sister", to visit him briefly; the false sister (an American citizen) swaps clothes and places with Curran in his cell while the lights have gone out during a staged power outage. Unsuspecting Police Sergeant Michael O'Hara (Denis O'Dea) helps the pair into a waiting carriage. He notices that one is wearing high heels, but thinks little of it.
The city is immediately sealed off as the manhunt for the fugitive begins. O'Hara is assigned to watch a section of the waterfront and daydreams of what he could do with the £500 bounty. Already conflicted by divided loyalties, he is visited by his overtly nationalistic wife (Eileen Crowe). Then, Curran shows up disguised as itinerant ballad singer Jimmy Walsh. O'Hara is suspicious and has him sing; Curran chooses the patriotic "The Rising of the Moon". Despite his unconvincing rendition, he manages to slip away on a boat sent for him while O'Hara bickers with his wife. When the policeman sees Curran getting away, he starts to raise the alarm, then reconsiders and starts singing "The Rising of the Moon" himself.
Cast
The Majesty of the Law
A Minute's Wait
1921
References
The Rising of the Moon (film) WikipediaThe Rising of the Moon (film) IMDb The Rising of the Moon (film) themoviedb.org