Thursday, April 11, 2013

Watch New Movie 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

Movie Title : The Angels' Share
Release Date : Apr 12, 2013 Limited
Genre Movie :Drama,Comedy
Mpaa Rating : Unrated
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 Movie The Angels' Share :
User Count Like for The Angels' Share : 3,107
Critics Ranting For The Angels' Share : 7
Critics Percentage For The Angels' Share : 88 %

Trailer For The Angels' Share

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Review For Movie The Angels' Share
While there's no ignoring the social ills that haunt Robbie's hopes, the movie's optimism serves as a cheeky, and surprisingly inspiring, retort.
Elizabeth Weitzman-New York Daily News

Just how is one supposed to react, in 2013, to a non-ironic use of the Proclaimers' "(I'm Gonna Be) 500 Miles" in a musical montage?
Jordan Hoffman-Film.com

Loach coaxes an endearingly poised performance out of nonprofessional Brannigan, and largely sells these scuffling characters as neither hopeless nor heroic-just terribly human.
Eric Hynes-Time Out New York

[Its] fleeting slapstick tendency wins out, regrettably diminishing the film's social consciousness in the process.
Calum Marsh-Village Voice

Loach's realism always carries a distinct sense of humor, volatility and, most alarmingly in this hypercapitalist new century, a socialist passion for The People.
Steven Boone-Chicago Sun-Times

An amiable comedy about young Glaswegian roughnecks discovering the world of whisky, "The Angels' Share" finds helmer Ken Loach and long-term screenwriting partner Paul Laverty in better, breezier form than their rebarbative prior effort,
Leslie Felperin-Variety

I'm not suggesting The Angels' Share is a chock full of bellylaughs, but it's the first Loach film in some time that lacks the sensation of having a plastic grocery bag pulled over one's face.
Brian Orndorf-Blu-ray.com

Some good laughs and a passable air of bonhomie do nothing to cover up the fact that The Angels' Share is totally lightweight and distractingly underdone.
Simon Abrams-The Playlist

Loach's best film since The Wind That Shakes the Barley.
Edward Douglas-ComingSoon.net

Scent, fine acting, plus superb cinematography carry you through. However, you can't help but feel you've been cheated out of a truly devastating drama by folks in search of something more commercially palatable and, consequently, less plausible.
Brandon Judell-CultureCatch

Ken Loach's breezy scribble about lowlife redemption and drunken buffoonery isn't so much heavy-handed as it is charmingly weightless.
Glenn Heath Jr.-Slant Magazine

Although some of the accents are so thick it's difficult to understand the dialogue (where are the subtitles when we need them?) the performances feel genuine.
Grant Butler-Oregonian

This is as close to a feel-good film as [director] Ken Loach gets, yet he never loses sight or touch with the reality he is so brilliant at capturing on camera.
Jim Schembri-3AW

The Angels' Share is the charming story of four Scottish criminals who find redemption - if not exactly rehabilitation - through alcohol. It may not seem like the typical logline for a heart-warmer; it seems about right for a Ken Loach flick.
Simon Miraudo-Quickflix

Loach brings a warm-hearted poignancy to this feel-good tale of the more disadvantaged in society who, miraculously, find redemption.
Ed Gibbs-The Sun Herald

I loved this. I walked out of this film just really filled with delight. Ken Loach is such a socially conscious filmmaker.
Margaret Pomeranz-At the Movies (Australia)

The film has a rough and ready look, but the charm of its battler characters shines through and there's plenty to relish here, even though the plot gets more and more improbable the further it proceeds.
David Stratton-At the Movies (Australia)

[Loach's] latest collaboration with screenwriter Paul Laverty proves the pair can pull off a genre entertainment with aplomb when in the mood.
Jake Wilson-The Age (Australia)

Ken Loach does hope' could be the headline a Fleet Street sub might slap on a review of The Angels' Share, in which a young Scot accidentally finds salvation and a way out of his trapped life of crime and misery
Andrew L. Urban-Urban Cinefile

The spirit and the flesh are willing in this mischievous, bittersweet comedy in which single malt whisky, an ex crim and second chances come together in an interesting blend
Louise Keller-Urban Cinefile

Finds room for some well-earned warm fuzzies.
Tony Stamp-Flicks.co.nz

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Movie Overview For The Angels' Share

Narrowly avoiding jail, new dad Robbie vows to turn over a new leaf. A visit to a whisky distillery inspires him and his mates to seek a way out of their hopeless lives.

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