Aileen O'Hara
Emily Watson
Aileen O'Hara

In a windswept fishing village, a mother is torn between protecting her beloved son and her own sense of right and wrong. A lie she tells for him rips apart their family and close-knit community.
Official Trailer Official
Aileen O'Hara
Emily Watson
Aileen O'Hara
Brian O'Hara
Paul Mescal
Brian O'Hara
Sarah Murphy
Aisling Franciosi
Sarah Murphy
Con O'Hara
Declan Conlon
Con O'Hara
Erin O'Hara
Toni O'Rourke
Erin O'Hara
Mary Fitz
Marion O'Dwyer
Mary Fitz
Francie D'Arcey
Brendan McCormack
Francie D'Arcey
Paddy O'Hara
Lalor Roddy
Paddy O'Hara
Emma Daly
Isabelle Connolly
Emma Daly
Nigel O'Connor
Seán T. Ó Meallaigh
Nigel O'Connor
Dennis Guiney
Steve Gunn
Dennis Guiney
Sheila Breen
Leah Minto
Sheila Breen
"Brian" (Paul Mescal) has recently returned to his family home on the west coast of Ireland to a warm welcome from his mother "Aileen" (Emily Watson) and a largely indifferent one from his father "Con" (Declan O'Hara). For reasons we are not told, he has returned from Australia and is soon determined to pick up his ailing grandfather's oyster farming business. Despite knowing very little about this, he knuckles down and with the help of some "borrowed" half-grown's from the seafood factory where his mother works, seems intent on making a go of things. All is set fair until one evening, "Aileen" has to pay a visit to the police station where she learns of an accusation, a very serious accusation, being levelled against the apple of her eye. She reacts defensively, and firmly, as any mother probably would - but as the remainder of the story develops, we see her begin to reconsider her position. Might he actually have done what he was accused of? The story itself is all rather weak here, sorry. Some beautiful location photography and loads of lingering shots of folks having cigarettes doesn't really ignite this. The narrative is put together in a rather bitty, unconvincing, fashion and though Watson is on great form as the increasingly conflicted lady, Mescal offers very little beyond his hail-fellow-well-met character and the underlying gist of the story is seriously undercooked. It does offer us a glimpse of the difficulties faced by those making a living in this harsh and unforgiving environment and perhaps I will think twice before I eat an Irish oyster again, but I think too much emphasis has been placed on who is in this film rather than developing a story that has depth and detail and holds the attention of the audience. It is worth a watch, and it's co-produced by BBC Film so the telly at Christmas is sure to be a place to find it.
Read full reviewMark Kermode reviews God's Creatures (2022)
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