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Larry Donnelly We all have movies that we watch over and over again - so here are my top 10

A self-confessed ‘ignoramus’ about pop culture, even Larry Donnelly has his own festive film favourites.

AS MOST OF us are digesting the turkey and ham and enjoying a few beverages with loved ones on this wonderful Christmas Day after the annus horribilis that was 2021, I am eschewing the rough and tumble of politics for a change.

Before parsing my list of the top ten movies I’ll be taking in during the next week or so, it’s important for readers to understand my vantage point.

I am an ignoramus about most of the things that ordinary people derive great joy from and banter knowledgeably about with family, friends and colleagues.

I know almost nothing about popular culture. I don’t buy music in traditional or new formats. I seldom go to gigs – actually make that never since the Saw Doctors stopped touring. Plays, musicals and operas are mysteries to me.

With the exception of a strange addiction to Blue Bloods, I only look at sports and current affairs on television.

Radio is my thing. I have never “binged” on Netflix and could count the number of programmes I have ever streamed using any platform on one hand.

I loathe going to the cinema and have to be prodded by my wife – who frequently wonders how she stays married to a proud troglodyte – to even sit through a film at home that I have not previously seen. The thoughts of wasting two hours on rubbish terrify me.

All of that having been said, I know I am not alone. A small minority of us wallow in our indifference. But I do have some movies that I watch over and over again, to the consternation of my brother in particular, who will have to endure my selections as we (hopefully) will be winging our way to Boston the day after tomorrow.

Here they are:

10. Home Alone (both 1 and 2)

I had to start with a Christmas film and these two, which Larry Óg adores viewing with his parents, are undeniably good.

Seeing them this year, I was genuinely moved by young Kevin’s interactions in the first film with Old Man Marley, who his older brother alleged was a serial killer, and in the second film with the Pigeon Lady, played by Brenda Fricker.

It may be sentimental or schmaltzy, yet the ‘don’t judge a book by its cover’ lesson flowing from these unusual friendships is a crucial one for girls and boys. And it’s a valuable reminder for us all.

9. The Friends of Eddie Coyle

The Boston gangster movie is its own genre at this stage. This one is the original, and still ranks among the best.

It has an obvious appeal for natives – one of the key scenes, for instance, unfolds in the car park at the MBTA subway station nearest to the house I grew up in – but it is an absorbing story that is craftily told.

The Friends of Eddie Coyle depicts a grittier, harsher Boston that is no more. Lots of us miss that place dearly, however, warts and all.

8. Southie

Staying in the best city on the planet, Southie is a low budget picture that nonetheless features highly regarded actors like Donnie Wahlberg, Rose McGowan and Amanda Peet.

It was greatly overshadowed by Good Will Hunting, which was released shortly before it.

Southie offers a thrilling portrayal of the bleaker realities of the criminal underworld that some young men in the neighbourhood were drawn to. That, of course, was before gentrification took hold and South Boston was transformed utterly.

7. Magnum Force

I am a massive fan of the Dirty Harry series starring the terrific Clint Eastwood and this is at the top of my list.

Harry Callahan encounters a group of young military veterans who have joined the police force and believe they have a moral duty to rid San Francisco of malevolent people, due process of law be damned. They envisage Callahan as a potential ally in their vigilantism.

“I’m afraid you’ve misjudged me,” is Clint’s coolly detached retort to their entreaties before he sends the rookie cops, as well as a supporter in the upper echelon of the department, to their graves. A classic.

6. Beverly Hills Cop

I don’t think there is a funnier person on the planet than Eddie Murphy. And he is in peak form in this perfect blend of comedy and action.

No matter how many times I have seen it, I invariably find myself guffawing at Detective Axel Foley’s antics – notwithstanding the fact that many of the admittedly offensive jokes and gags no longer pass the smell test nearly four decades on.

Fantastic chase scenes and shoot-ups galore.

5. Caddyshack

Given my obsession with golf, I have to mention this absolutely hilarious comedy set at a Long Island country club.

Its legions of aficionados claim that Bill Murray, as a uniquely eccentric greens keeper, is the main attraction. Murray is good, but to me, Rodney Dangerfield, as the outrageously garish and vulgar real estate developer, Al Czervik, is the standout performer.

Golfers will recognise the typical club snob in Judge Elihu Snails, played masterfully by Ted Knight, who Dangerfield, in his own inimitable style, delights in infuriating with numerous uproarious insults.

4. National Lampoon’s European Vacation

It is not excessively glib to opine that millions of Americans learned all they know, or think they know, about Europe from this film in which the Griswold family win an all-expenses-paid holiday on a TV game show and criss-cross the continent.

While some annoying stereotypes are to the fore, it is all in good fun and done with great humour from beginning to end.

Chevy Chase as Clark Griswold, the too earnest yet quite likeable leader of the clan, is brilliant, as is Jason Lively as Rusty, a prototypical 1980s American teenager whose behaviour and mentality I and many of my contemporaries could identify with – embarrassingly.

3. The Verdict

Paul Newman was nominated for a Best Actor Oscar in his role as an alcoholic attorney, Frank Galvin, who gets a shot at redemption in a medical malpractice case arising from the negligent treatment of a woman in a hospital owned by the Catholic Archdiocese of Boston.

Plenty of lawyers, myself included, can easily understand why Galvin grew so disillusioned with practice and suffered from depression and addiction.

The stunned expression on the face of James Mason playing Ed Concannon, the big law firm fixer leading the archdiocese’s defence team, when the anguished Irish nurse who had worked at the hospital reveals under cross-examination that she had kept a copy of a damning document, is an extraordinary moment.

Albeit fictional, it’s both affirming and inspirational to see a solitary, down on his luck lawyer go up against the establishment and achieve justice for his client.

2. Rocky

This is the ultimate underdog tale.

It is difficult to fathom from this remove, but producers originally wanted Burt Reynolds to play the title part. Fortunately, Sylvester Stallone got to be the lead in the script he had written and the rest really is history.

The fight and training scenes are captivating; the culture of Philadelphia in the 1970s is captured magnificently; and the characters are fascinating.

As well as Stallone’s defining acting, Burgess Meredith is excellent as the salty old trainer, Mickey Goldmill.

I love the sequels too, and I rate the entire series in this order: 1, 3, 6, 4, 2, 5.

1. Jaws

Returning to Massachusetts (see a theme emerging here?) – the shark epic was filmed on Martha’s Vineyard – Jaws is an outstanding horror movie and much more besides.

In my estimation, it is the most eminently watchable motion picture ever made. I have happily sat through it at least 100 times and never tire of tuning in.

Robert Shaw is superb as the hard-bitten fisherman Quint, who relishes ridiculing Richard Dreyfuss’s Matt Hooper. It has subsequently been disclosed that this relentless antagonism extended off screen.

The flawed person I am most drawn to in Jaws, though, is Mayor Larry Vaughn, whose unwavering focus, no matter what tragedies transpire in the water, is on his political self-interest.

His related snarky reply to shark expert Hooper’s warnings about the dangers posed by a great white – “love to prove that, get your name in the National Geographic” – is a downright amazing insult in the context.

This is what has been and will be occupying my down time. I have no doubt that some will scoff at my philistine tastes. Have at it. I’ll revert to politics next time around.

Warmest regards to all readers for Christmas and New Year. Let’s hold on to the modest hope that 2022 will be a better year for everyone than 2021.

Larry Donnelly is a Boston attorney, a Law Lecturer at NUI Galway and a political columnist with TheJournal.ie. His new book – “The Bostonian: Life in an Irish American Political Family” – is published by Gill Books and is available in all book shops.

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    Mute Sean Reddin
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:32 PM

    Wouldn’t be like the church to break the law and get away with it.

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    Mute Sarah Cullen
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:12 PM

    Why are the department of health commenting on priests….is there a connection??

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    Mute Critical Thinker
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    Nov 6th 2020, 1:10 PM

    @Sarah Cullen: Because the dept of health has become the government and the judiciary

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    Mute Jim Buckley Barrett
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:36 PM

    So if I have a house party I could be fined up to €2,500 and face 6 months in prison unless I’m a priest, in which case I can hold multiple mass each week and have no fear….

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    Mute Sarah Cullen
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:38 PM

    @Jim Buckley Barrett: Invite a priest to the party….sorted!

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    Mute Kevin Kane
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    Nov 6th 2020, 1:03 PM

    @Sarah Cullen: Id’ recommend The Spinmaster, Father Billy O’Dwyer.

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    Mute Patrick Hudi Irwin
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    Nov 6th 2020, 1:54 PM

    @Sarah Cullen: lol

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    Mute Mary Nugent
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    Nov 6th 2020, 4:16 PM

    @Jim Buckley Barrett: drink all the red wine you want, it’s Gods will.

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    Mute Vanessa
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:29 PM

    We are NOT in anything together beside trying to dodge rules as much as possible as it seems.

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    Mute hasnooneasked
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    Nov 6th 2020, 2:54 PM

    @Vanessa: so what would you do

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    Mute Derek Moran
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:43 PM

    What about ordained jedi Knights?

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    Mute NotMyIreland
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    Nov 6th 2020, 1:42 PM

    So religious gatherings are ok? So the 30 people coming to mine this evening are ok because we are all members of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster or Pastafarians, celebrating our holy day.

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    Mute dublinguide.ie
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    Nov 6th 2020, 4:40 PM

    @NotMyIreland:
    No they’re not ok, it clearly states that

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    Mute Vanessa
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    Nov 6th 2020, 5:25 PM

    @dublinguide.ie: There’s nothing clear. That’s seems to be the reason for the discussion

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    Mute NotMyIreland
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    Nov 6th 2020, 6:38 PM

    @dublinguide.ie: yeah but for religious reasons I couldn’t get prosecuted

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    Mute Mark Walsh
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    Nov 6th 2020, 11:01 PM

    @NotMyIreland: Jah …Pastafari

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    Mute Critical Thinker
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    Nov 6th 2020, 1:08 PM

    Why is the dept of health commented on what should be judicial matters?

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    Mute Sportmad
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    Nov 6th 2020, 2:48 PM

    I say bring back the Mass Rock Services might be cold but worth it..
    There are a lot of people who miss the services of Mass..

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    Mute ÓDuibhír Abú
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    Nov 6th 2020, 3:05 PM

    @Sportmad: Changing bread into a Body and Wine into Blood. It’s a Good Show.

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    Mute David Van-Standen
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    Nov 6th 2020, 4:04 PM

    Any priest or other cleric that holds mass or service during the current restrictions, is clearly demonstrating a complete disregard for the safety of their local community.

    Whether they can or should bend or fudge the measures in place to hold such gatherings isn’t a question of legal clarity, it’s a matter of moral duty and obligation to prevent the spread of covid19 within their communities.

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    Mute Michael Byrne
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    Nov 6th 2020, 5:35 PM

    @David Van-Standen: David, That’s nonsense, even as a non mass goer, i can sympathize with those who want mass and are being denied access to their faith, if distancing can be enforced what difference is people gathering in a church, over gathering in a supermarket??

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    Mute Karel Aija
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    Nov 6th 2020, 6:31 PM

    @Michael Byrne: if their faith resides in the walls of a church and not their heart/soul/mind, then yes they have been denied access, and rightfully so. If they need to listen to a papi, they can do so online. Drink your wine and eat your bread at home. Offer your peace in spirit, not in touch. Completely agree that churches can stay shut to the public for a few weeks. It is not an essential service, since religion resides within us, not churches.

    What what would you do if the church is packed to capacity and not all who want to enter can get in? If god resides in the church then who is the authorised person to say that the ones outside the church doors are not worthy enough to enter the mass but others are? Better to have no ceremony, than a ceremony for some and not all.

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    Mute David Van-Standen
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    Nov 6th 2020, 9:12 PM

    @Michael Byrne: so you don’t believe that priests have a duty of care for their congregations and a responsibility to protect them from a known public health threat during a pandemic?

    Practising faith doesn’t require a physical place if you believe your God is omnipresent does it?

    If people want to observe the ritual of a mass the tools are available to do so online and accessible to anyone with a internet connected device or phone.

    On supermarkets verses church, for engaging with the supermarket of their choice, many people are using technology to order shopping and have it delivered, but others are still physically going to shops to get food, because these are the options.

    Engaging with your God of choice doesn’t require either a delivery service or a franchised outlet…

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    Mute David Corrigan
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:10 PM

    OK.

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    Mute John Lynch
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    Nov 6th 2020, 6:06 PM

    Did any priest celebrate Mass? None named. So what is this all about? The usual sneering from modern heroes who specialize in insulting old people and priests.

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    Mute Jonathan
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:25 PM

    Lock them up

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    Mute gary mullen
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    Nov 6th 2020, 7:27 PM

    Leo Martin OUT Mary Lou IN

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    Mute Darren Callaghan
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    Nov 6th 2020, 6:47 PM

    The big churches in Ireland are probably only at about 5% of their capacity on a normal Sunday anyway, you would be hard pressed to find anyone under 60 at a normal Sunday service these days so just let them use social distancing and masks, and as the Catholic Church has so much land and property that they have no use for anymore maybe they should sell this land and properties and give the money they owe to the victims of their past atrocities

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    Mute Mona Murphy
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    Nov 7th 2020, 12:12 AM

    @Darren Callaghan: how do you know how many attend when you dont. The Church I go to mass in, or did before the lock down had a very large crowd attending mass. So speak when you know what you are talking about.

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    Mute Bramer
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    Nov 7th 2020, 2:23 AM

    Well they weren’t arrested when they were screwing kids so what’s new!

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    Mute John Lynch
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    Nov 8th 2020, 11:04 AM

    @Bramer:
    Pavlovian response. Say the word ‘priest’ and here we go again.

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    Mute Michael Mcshane
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    Nov 6th 2020, 7:04 PM

    Only God Almighty can judge thee…. :D

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    Mute thomas patrick
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    Nov 6th 2020, 7:41 PM

    Wow… so my comment was removed… this is what that feels like….

    I didn’t name anyone or call out any “fake information”

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    Mute Sarah Cullen
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    Nov 6th 2020, 8:28 PM

    @thomas patrick: no way?? I do not actually know what was wrong with it, its a fact they haven’t been convicted?!

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