"I am an Irish Catholic and I have a long iceberg of guilt"
- Irish novelist Edna O'Brien
In the miserable fictional island of Inisherin, off of the coast of the extraordinarily beautiful landscape of Ireland, there is nothing to do other than drink a pint and, well, read? There are the rocky beds off the beaten paths leading to one farmhouse in the distance after another. Guilt seems to exist but only on the periphery of anyone's mind - you feel guilty? Drink a pint. Such is the case with the blackly funny and tremendously evocative and intimate film about people in the Irish community of Inisherin, "The Banshees of Inisherin," which is set in 1923 right around the end of the Irish Civil War.
One of the dullest men in Inisherin is Pádraic Súilleabháin (Colin Farrell), a very nice, easygoing farmer with cows and a precious donkey wearing a bell that always enters the home. Pádraic lives with his sister, the feisty Siobhán (Kerry Condon), who longs for a way out of Inisherin and can't stand having the donkey in the house. Pádraic frequents the local pub every day and discovers that his best friend, Colm (Brendan Gleeson), no longer likes him. Colm is not dying or anything that grave that would explain his sudden remove from him - he just finds Pádraic dull. Of course, everyone is dull in this island yet Colm finds that his fiddle playing and musical compositions will be long remembered just like Mozart's, instead of being remembered for being "nice." Pádraic can't stand the fact that this has happened, and the film's running gag is that Pádraic keeps running into Colm. At first, it is just comedic and borderline pathetic but then it becomes deadly serious to the point that Colm threatens Padraic by cutting one of his own fingers and throwing it at Pádraic's front door! Surely that pathetic man who milks cows will learn to leave Colm alone. Not so fast.
"Banshees of Inisherin" would've been welcome and entrancing viewing had it just been about Pádraic and Colm yet it also focuses on Siobhán, a spinster of sorts who needs a life away from the coast, the people and especially the eldest resident of this overcast, gloomy island, Mrs. McCormick (Sheila Flitton) who portends doom between Colm and Pádraic. Siobhán finds a job at a library away from the mainland - it is her freedom that leaves everyone else behind, some of whom are tormented by their own self-imposed guilt (the constable who beats his own son is one such person).
Colin Farrell has never been better - an actor I've had reservations about in the past but this role of the nice Pádraic and his killer Penguin role from "The Batman" makes 2022 his best year ever. Brendan Gleeson carries the weight of his indifferent Colm in his whole manner of being - he aims high for the creation of art yet friendship to anyone, and the loss of his precious appendages, has to take a backseat. Kerry Condon is the sympathetic sister who can be fierce and will not tolerate her brother's inability to stand up for himself - hard to believe this is the same actress from the TV series "Better Call Saul."
I always love Irish stories and "The Banshees of Inisherin" is one I will not soon forget. The intense drama and conflict amongst these lost souls is etched in every frame and is adroitly handled by director Martin McDonagh ("In Bruges"), in direct contrast with the staggering landscape which portends its own doom. The unapologetic sense of guilt from Colm, Pádraic and Siobhán will persist, a long iceberg of it.












