Five Minutes of Heaven
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Five Minutes of Heaven is a 2009 Irish film directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel from a script by Guy Hibbert. The film was premiered on 19 January 2009 at the 25th Sundance Film Festival where it won the World Cinema Dramatic Directing Award for Oliver Hirschbiegel, and the World Cinema Screenwriting Award for Guy Hibbert. As a television film it was broadcast on BBC Two on 5 April 2009, and also had an international feature film release.

The first part reconstructs the historical killing of 19-year-old Jim Griffin by 17-year-old Alistair Little in 1975, and the second part depicts a fictional meeting between Little and Griffin s brother Joe 33 years later.

Plot

In Lurgan, Northern Ireland, during 1975 and the Northern Irish Troubles, the Irish Republican Army are targeting loyalists; in turn, the loyalist Ulster Volunteer Force are exacting revenge on Catholics they claim are militant republicans. Alistair Little, 17, is the leader of a UVF cell, eager to let blood. He and his gang are given the go-ahead to kill a young Catholic man, James Griffin, as a reprisal and a warning to others. When they kill Griffin, his 8-year old little brother, Joe watches in horror. Little is arrested and sentenced to prison for 12 years.

In 2008—thirty-three years after the murder and nineteen years after Little is released from prison—Little and Griffin have been set up to meet on camera by a reconciliation project. Little has served his sentence and peace has been agreed to in Northern Ireland, but Joe Griffin is not coming on the programme for a handshake. He is carrying a knife and intends to murder his brother s killer during the meeting. However, just before he is to go on camera, he becomes extremely agitated and demands that the cameras be removed. When the producers try to calm him, he leaves, and the two men do not meet.

Little offers to meet Griffin, and Griffin accepts. Griffin asks Little to meet him at Griffin s childhood home, now abandoned and boarded up, where Little murdered his brother. As Griffin reaches for the knife before the meeting, his wife tries to stop him, but he pushes her to the floor. At the meeting, Griffin, full of hate and wanting vengeance, attacks Little from behind and attempts to stab him. In the struggle, they fall through a second story window. Both are hurt. Little tells Griffin that he is leaving for Belfast. He explains why he killed Griffin s brother. He tells Griffin to get rid of me , to tell his family that he has killed Little and to live his life for them, not for vengeance.

Griffin very shakily lights up a cigarette as Little pulls himself from the wall he was sitting against and limps down the road. Soon after, Griffin attends a therapy group and tells them, crying, that he wants to be a good father for his daughters. He calls Little and tells him, We re finished. Little appears happy and befuddled, not quite sure what to do next.

Cast

(in order of appearance)

  • Mark Davison as Young Alistair
  • Diarmuid Noyes as Andy
  • Niamh Cusack as Alistair s Mum
  • Matthew McElhinney as Stuart
  • Conor MacNeill as Dave
  • Paul Garret as Alistair s Dad
  • Kevin O Neill as Young Joe
  • Gerard Jordan as Jim
  • Paula McFetridge as Joe s Mum (gene Griffin )
  • James Nesbitt as Adult Joe
  • Barry McEvoy as Joe s Chauffeur
  • Liam Neeson as Adult Alistair
  • Richard Orr as Alistair s Chauffeur
  • Richard Dormer as Michael
  • Anamaria Marinca as Vika
  • Jonathan Harden as David

Production

Five Minutes of Heaven was originally commissioned by BBC Four, as Hibbert did not want television executives to interfere with the script. BBC Four abandoned the project when they could not provide a bigger budget. To get more money for the film, independent production company Big Fish Films brought in other financial backers, including Northern Ireland Screen, and the film was eventually commissioned by Controller of BBC Two Roly Keating, and BBC Controller of Fiction Jane Tranter.

Filming took place on location in Belfast, Dundonald, Lurgan, Glenarm and Newtownards for four weeks from May to June 2008. Nesbitt met Griffin before filming began but Neeson decided to wait until after it had concluded before meeting Little; he said I didn t want to see him before because I didn t want to be reminded of the physical differences between us and I didn t want to get that cluttered up in my head.

This was also the first time that two of Northern Ireland s top actors, Liam Neeson and James Nesbitt, had starred in a film together.

Release

Five Minutes of Heaven premiered at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival on 19 January 2009. It won in the World Cinema Directed Award: Dramatic, and World Cinema Screenwriting Award categories. It received its Irish premiere at the 2009 Jameson Dublin International Film Festival on 21 February 2009. A screening was given by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts in London on 23 March 2009. It was followed by a question-and-answer session with Hirschbiegel, Hibbert and Nesbitt. It was broadcast on BBC Two in England, Scotland and Wales on 5 April 2009 and on BBC One Northern Ireland on 13 April. Pathé holds worldwide theatrical distribution rights.

IFC Films signed a deal to distribute the film in the United States from August 2009, theatrically, through its video on demand service, and exclusively through Blockbuster retailers. The film opened at the Angelika Film Center in New York on 21 August 2009. It took $5,200 in box office receipts on its first weekend.

Reception

The film received positive reviews from film critics. As of June 2020, the film holds a 75% approval rating on review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 44 reviews with an average rating of 6.56 out of 10. The website s critics consensus reads: Oliver Hirschbiegel s dramatic take on The Troubles is an actor s showcase—and Liam Neeson and James Nesbitt are more than up to the challenge. The film also won the Christopher Ewart-Biggs Memorial Prize.

After Five Minutes of Heaven s Sundance screenings, Kirk Honeycutt of The Hollywood Reporter called it very good at stating the obvious but fails to bring new insight to this age-old morality tale . He cited the scenes featuring Mark Davison (as the young Little) and Anamaria Marinca (as a television producer) as the only time the movie sparks to life . Dennis Harvey for Variety was complimentary of Hibbert s screenplay and of Neeson s acting.

Padraic Geoghegan of RTÉ Entertainment criticized the lack of screen-time given to Griffin s family, and for not showing how Little came to be helping others like him in the present-day scenes. Geoghegan praised the flashback scenes, Hirschbeigel s direction, and Neeson and Nesbitt s acting. The Irish Times Michael Dwyer rated the film four out of five stars. Of the acting, he wrote,

Nesbitt vividly portrays Griffin as a man still coiled with rage and horror by indelible memories of a living nightmare when he was a boy. And Neeson’s haunted features reveal the guilt and pain Little has carried since he committed his terrible crime.

Andrew Johnston for Culture Northern Ireland wrote,

Unlike some other Ulster-set pictures, Five Minutes of Heaven presents real people with real emotions, rather than political caricatures or slavish impersonations. There’s a slight sense that most of the budget went on securing Neeson, but the minimalist soundtrack, grotty colour scheme and amateurish fight scenes help underline the emptiness of the lead characters and the desolation of their predicament.

Awards

Year Award Category Nominee Result
2009 Sundance Film Festival World Cinema, Directed: Dramatic Oliver Hirschbiegel Won
World Cinema, Screenwriting Guy Hibbert Won
Grand Jury Prize Oliver Hirschbiegel Nominated
2010 Irish Film and Television Academy Awards Single Drama/Drama Serial Eoin O Callaghan Won
Actor in a Lead Role: Television Liam Neeson Nominated
Director of Photography Ruairí O Brien Nominated
Royal Television Society Programme Awards Best Single Drama Five Minutes of Heaven Won
Best Writer (Drama) Guy Hibbert Nominated
Broadcasting Press Guild Awards Best Single Drama Five Minutes of Heaven Nominated
Best Actor James Nesbitt Nominated
British Academy Television Craft Awards Writer Guy Hibbert Won
British Academy Television Awards Best Single Drama Guy Hibbert, Oliver Hirschbiegel, Eoin O Callaghan, Stephen Wright Nominated

Year 2009
ReleaseDate 2009-02-27
RuntimeMins 89
RuntimeStr 1h 29min
Plot The story of former UVF member Alistair Little. Twenty-five years after Little killed Joe Griffen’s brother, the media arrange an auspicious meeting between the two.
Awards Won 1 BAFTA Award, 9 wins & 12 nominations total
Directors Oliver Hirschbiegel
Writers Guy Hibbert
Stars Liam Neeson, James Nesbitt, Anamaria Marinca
Produced by Ed Guiney,François Ivernel,Marshall Leviten,Andrew Lowe,Cameron McCracken,Don Mullan,Eoin O Callaghan,Patrick Spence,Paul Trijbits,Stephen Wright
Music by Leo Abrahams,David Holmes
Cinematography by Ruairí O Brien
Film Editing by Hans Funck
Casting By Georgia Simpson
Production Design by Mark Lowry
Art Direction by Gillian Devenney
Costume Design by Maggie Donnelly
Makeup Department Jilly Green,Lorna McSloy,Paula Moore,Conor O Sullivan,Laura Pollock,Pamela Smyth
Production Management Mark Devlin,Damien Glenholmes,Miranda Jones,Andrew Reid,Faye Ward
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director Sean Roe Curran,Lynne Davison,Darren Fee,Jack Hamill,Peter Nightingale,Samantha Ross,Richard Wilson
Art Department James Barr,Conor Bradly,Sean Bradly,Diarmuid Corr,Michael Cullen,Cole Doherty,Shea Doherty,Raymond Ginnane,Sian Alaw Jones,Sean McAliskey,Felix McCrudden,Lisa McDiarmid,Keiran McElvanna,Neil McNally,Christopher Moore,Alan Nixon,Sarah Speers,Paul Stewart
Sound Department Mark Appleby,Alan Collins,Caoimhe Doyle,Steve Fanagan,John Fitzgerald,Fionán Higgins,Ronan Hill,Simon Kerr,Paul Maynes,Terry McDonald,Jean McGrath,Jon Stevenson,Alex Hudd
Special Effects by Kevin Byrne
Visual Effects by Mike Branton,Marie A. Jones,John Kennedy
Stunts Brendan Condren,Joe Condren,Tommy Sheen,John Sheridan,Paul Valentine
Camera and Electrical Department Raymond Carlin,Hugh-Thomas Cavanagh,Dermot Coleman,Noah Davis,Bryan Drysdale,Nicky Fitzgerald,Andy Gardner,Howard Gibson Steele,Conor Hammond,Glynn Harrison,Roy Harrison,Christopher Hill,Steffan Hill,Gary Hutchinson,Davie Mayes,Carlo McDonnell,Eugene McVeigh,Roger Tooley,Ruth Woodside
Costume and Wardrobe Department Kerry Gooding,Lauren Hanna,Heather Long,Edel McCarron
Editorial Department Colin Coull,Andschana Eschenbach,Jessica Felton,Dave Hughes,Tim Morris,Shane Murphy,Dan Roberts
Location Management Nicola Bailey-James,Robert Boake,David Cooke,Trevor Currie,Catherine Geary,Stephen Hanley,Sarah Hills
Music Department Jane Bridgeman
Script and Continuity Department Lynda Marshall
Transportation Department Jeff Brown,Maurice Brown,Alan Crozier,Dermie,Walter Hawthorne,Paul McCausland,John McDowell,Lee McFadden,Gavin McGlashan,Michael Thompson,Phillip Wiggans,Ryan Marshall
Additional Crew Monika Agorelius,Yasu Asami,Matt Bannister,Jonathan Blair,Michelle Burns,Mark Byrne,Una Carlin,James Clarke,Louise Cornally,Rowena Crofts,Suzi Crofts-Fawsitt,Sean Roe Curran,Lorraine Denis,Pierre Du Plessis,Donal Geraghty,Anna Graham,Robert Gyle,Paula Heffernan,Aaron Hendriks,Joe Hendriks,James Hickey,Ruth Hunter,Kevin Jackson,Geraldine Jeffers,Steve Joberns,Christina Jules,Moyra Lock,Linda Martin,Jennifer McAufield,Michael McCartney,Stephen McDonogh,Fiona McGuire,Damian McParland,Tim O Shea,Ailsa Orr,George Pank,Simon Perry,Joan Purvis,Anne Quinn,Laura Rees,Michael Ritchie,Mike Runagall,Emma Scott,Bronagh Taylor,Ian Thomson,Richard Williams,Susie Wright,Andy Brunskill,Juliette Caron,Huma Khan
Thanks Toby Babst,An Dorthe Braker,Bernd Eichinger,Joe Griffin,Mechthild Holter,Alistair Little
Genres Drama, Thriller
Companies BBC Films, Big Fish Films, Bord Scannán na hÉireann / The Irish Film Board
Countries UK, Ireland
Languages English
ContentRating R
ImDbRating 6.6
ImDbRatingVotes 12810
MetacriticRating 62
Keywords reconciliation,vengeance,title spoken by character,cell phone,timeframe 1970s