Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Watch film The Angels' Share with HD Format

Winner of the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film festival, legendary director Ken Loach , one of Britain's most distinguished and respected filmmakers, who makes tough, uncompromising films about a beleaguered working class with poetry and humor, and longtime writing partner Paul Laverty (The Wind that Shakes the Barley, Bread and Roses and My Name is Joe), present an engagingly off-kilter new film, The Angels' Share. Robbie, a young ne'er do well (Paul Brannigan), a broke new father with a good heart is in serious trouble with the law. When he holds his newborn son for the first time, roguish Robbie is determined that the boy will have a better life, one with more opportunities than he has been offered in this insular, blue collar world. But first Robbie must sort out a variety of pressing problems --his girlfriend's family wants to do him harm and run him out of town being first and foremost among them. He is given a lucky break by a judge who shows mercy, granting him community service instead of jail. Here he meets Rhino, Albert and Mo, former petty criminals also down on their luck. (c) IFC Films
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Movie Title : The Angels' Share
Genre Movie :Drama,Comedy
Mpaa Rating : Unrated
Release Date : Apr 12, 2013 Limited

Actors :Paul Brannigan,John Henshaw,Gary Maitland,William Ruane,Jasmin Riggins,Roger Allam,Siobhan Reilly,Charlie Maclean,Daniel Portman,Paul Donnelly


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Visitor Ranting & Critics For The Angels' Share

User Ranting The Angels' Share : 3.8
User Percentage For The Angels' Share : 80 %
User Count Like for The Angels' Share : 4,578
All Critics Ranting For The Angels' Share : 7
All Critics Count For The Angels' Share : 85
All Critics Percentage For The Angels' Share : 88 %

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Review For The Angels' Share

The result is a sometimes gritty, occasionally charming Highland hybrid, but the final balance feels slightly off-kilter.
Michael Posner-Globe and Mail

Loach takes us through the mysteries of whisky making, exploring the subtle tastes and scents in ways that will have audiences wishing they had a dram at hand. But a glass also serves more symbolic purposes ...
Linda Barnard-Toronto Star

If you want to look for it, you'll find a layer of metaphor (the distilling process as a symbol of the characters' evolution) and social-realist commentary amid the gentle, life-affirming laughs.
Colin Covert-Minneapolis Star Tribune

[Ken Loach] and his longtime screenwriter, Paul Laverty, find a good balance between drama and wacky character moments.
J. R. Jones-Chicago Reader

A fairy tale with its feet firmly on the ground.
Joe Williams-St. Louis Post-Dispatch

A lark, but it's a serious-minded lark, addressing issues of class and culture, the haves and have-nots.
Steven Rea-Philadelphia Inquirer

They're a fun bunch of tart-tongued Scots, and if their adventures don't amount to anything of thematic significance, watching them is a pleasure.
Eric D. Snider-EricDSnider.com

A surprisingly warm and heartfelt film about a flawed criminal struggling to start a new life after the birth of his first child.
John Hanlon-Big Hollywood

Ken Loach walks on the lighter side
Robert Denerstein-Movie Habit

Drink it up!
Chris Hewitt (St. Paul)-St. Paul Pioneer Press

The title, by the way, refers to the distillation process: the 2% of whisky that evaporates in the barrel is known as "the angel's share." I'm afraid there's more than 2% evaporation going on in Loach's latest.
Leah Churner-Austin Chronicle

Much like a stiff drink at the end of a long day, "The Angels' Share" gets the job done, but you're probably not going to remember it in the morning.
Mathew DeKinder-Suburban Journals of St. Louis

Loach's realism lends an easygoing, ramshackle quality to the film that smoothes over any lack of tightness.
Jeffrey M. Anderson-Common Sense Media

Director Ken Loach's latest glimpse of the U.K. underclass is really two rather different movies, either of which I would've enjoyed on their own. But they don't really fit together in any satisfying or even logical way.
Christopher Lloyd-Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Whether Robbie pulls off his caper should be left for the audience to discover. But Loach's great cinematic switcheroo goes off almost without a hitch.
Rob Thomas-Capital Times (Madison, WI)

As heartwarming and uplifting as any tale could be that features vicious beatings and grand larceny.
Kelly Vance-East Bay Express

While it has some likable characters, particularly its charismatic lead, it's impossible to shake the feeling that we've seen this movie before.
Brian Tallerico-HollywoodChicago.com

Lead actor Paul Brannigan, the product of Glasgow's working-class East End, is a natural.
James Verniere-Boston Herald

The usual Loachian elements are all in place, but there is a gentle spirit at work here as well, and not just the alcoholic spirits around which the plot revolves.
Andrea Chase-Killer Movie Reviews

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