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Agnes Browne

Agnes Browne
Agnes Browne FilmPoster.jpeg
Directed by Anjelica Huston
Produced by Anjelica Huston
Jim Sheridan
Written by John Goldsmith
Based on The Mammy by Brendan O'Carroll
Starring Anjelica Huston
Marion O'Dwyer
Ray Winstone
Music by Paddy Moloney
Cinematography Anthony B. Richmond
Edited by Eva Gardos
Production
company
Distributed by USA Films
Release date
December 3, 1999 (Limited)
March 3, 2000
Running time
92 minutes
Country United States
Ireland
Language English
French
Box office $148,853

Agnes Browne is a 1999 American/Irish romantic comedy-drama film directed, produced by, and starring Anjelica Huston, based on the book The Mammy by Brendan O'Carroll.

In 1967 in Dublin, the unexpected death of Agnes Browne's husband sends her family, consisting of seven children aged between two and fourteen, into emotional turmoil and financial crisis. She is forced to borrow money from a ruthless loan shark named Mr. Billy to make ends meet. She faces her dismal existence by selling fruits and vegetables at an open-air market based in Dublin's Moore Street where she spends time with her best friend Marion, who proves to be a great source of encouragement in her difficulties.

Wishing to escape her troubles, if only for a short time, Agnes dreams of finding enough money to attend an upcoming Tom Jones concert. Agnes' dream is realized when Marion secretly buys two tickets and gives them to her. Agnes also accepts the offer of a date with a French baker named Pierre. Her children pool their money together and buy her a new dress to wear on the date. Marion soon discovers an ominous lump in her breast, which proves fatal.

Eventually the family has to face the loan shark. Mr. Billy warns Agnes that she has until Christmas to pay him back or he will strip her house of her furniture. On Christmas Day, Agnes receives a letter stating she can collect the money from the hotel where her husband worked. She holds off Mr. Billy and sends her children to the hotel, where they meet Tom Jones and tell him their story. Tom then visits Agnes in her home, helps her pay off Mr. Billy, and carries off her and the children to the concert in his cab. At the concert, Tom Jones dedicates his song "She's a Lady" to Agnes.

Agnes Browne was not well received in the United States. Franz Lidz, writing in the New York Times, called it a "flimsy whimsy" and chided Roger Ebert for liking it. William Arnold felt that the ending trivialized the story, leaving the audience "with the uncomfortable feeling that we've just viewed some episode of a TV sitcom of the era."New York Times reviewer Stephen Holden found it "nothing more than a series of homey skits loosely woven into a portrait of a working-class saint."


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