Entertainment


The worst Irish movies ever made - VIDEOS & POLL

Haunted castles, Irish stereotypes and, best of all, Viagra spiked water supplies


Still from the movie "Holy Water"
Still from the movie "Holy Water"
Photo by Google Images

IrishCentral.com Poll

Which is the worst Irish movie ever made?

Holy Water


Far and Away


Leap Year


The Tigers Tale


High Spirits


What are the worst Irish movies ever made?

We think we have come up with the Top 5 but if you have any better or worse ideas, feel free to join in.

From stereotypical views of Ireland in “Leap Year” and atrocious acting and accents in “Far and Away” to the embarrassing tales of “High Spirits” and “A Tiger’s Tale,” there have been some really awful films made about or in Ireland.

Here at Irish Central, we’ve saved the number one spot for one of the most bizarre movies ever made. “Holy Water” is a tale about a group of men who put Viagra in their town’s water supply. Need we say more?
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Here’s our full list of the top worst Irish movies of all time:

Holy Water  (2009)


Just a short description of this Irish movie will show you quickly why it got our number one vote. The story centers around the town of Kilcoulins Leap, home of a famous Holy Well.  A postman, Podger Byrnes, comes up with a plan to hijack a van of Viagra and sell it in Amsterdam. When the plan goes wrong and Viagra’s makers send in their muscle, the postman and his friends hide the load of Viagra down the town’s Holy Well. You can guess the hilarity that follows.



Far and Away (1992)

Back in 1992, “Entertainment Weekly” spelled out perfectly what was wrong with this Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman epic about venturing into the Wild West in the 1800s. The review reads, “Cruise has no edge, no inner fire. He lacks the passionate, volatile qualities that might have expanded the character into something more than a screenwriter’s concoction. … Machine-tooled and weightless — that’s Cruise in ‘Far and Away’. And that’s the movie as well."

This movie is also an example of some of the worst Irish accents and lines in an Irish movie. The most famously bad line from this movie is one of Cruise’s when he says to Kidman’s character, “You're a corker, Shannon. What a corker you are.”

FAR AND AWAY: Movie TrailerEileen Pollock, Thomas Gibson

Leap Year (2010)

Guilty of leaving Ireland in the dark ages, “Leap Year” casted Oscar nominee Amy Adams as Anna, a woman desperate to marry her long term boyfriend. She plans a trip to the Emerald Isle for February 29, when traditionally in Ireland women can propose to men.

“The New York Times” got it right when a critic described “Leap Year” as one of the worst movies of the year. The romantic comedy paints modern Ireland as a backward country where a power surge caused by Adam’s Blackberry wipes out electricity for an entire town. The hackneyed love story does little to promote the true identity and lure of Ireland.

The Tiger’s Tail (2006)

Written and directed by Englishman John Boorman, this is one Irish film that belongs on the editor’s floor. Good points start and end with the cast line up, which includes Brendan Gleeson and Kim Cattrall (with a very unconvincing Irish accent).

Gleeson plays Liam, a property developer in Ireland’s economic heyday whose dodgy dealings leave him seeing a double of himself, akin to Macbeth’s ghosts who haunt him for the duration of the film.



High Spirits (1988)

The brilliant Peter O’Toole plays a major role in this movie which does not paint the Irish or Americans in the best light. Stereotypes and an embarrassingly predictable story earned this movie a place on our list.

The movie tells the story of a busload of American tourists who arrive at Peter Plunkett’s Iris castle, where Peter himself pretends that it is haunted.

 

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READ MORE: 

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11 Comments

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For Your Consideration: "Gangs of New York". Outside of D.D. Lewis cartoon buffoon,(which felt out of place), the film, to me, was wincingly bad.
Most of them look like a bit of harmless fun. I've seen way worse. Darby O'Gill anyone?
I enjoyed Leap Year.
Without delving too far into the comments, I'm shocked, just shocked that "The Magical Legend Of The Leprechauns" starring Randy Quaid and Roger Daltrey wasn't in the top five (worst five?) .... Horrendous storylines, terrible accents, terrible acting, nothing magical going on here, the producers and screenwriters should be stripped to their nether garments and hung upside down by their heels from the Spire of Dublin for thirty days for bringing forth such a travesty to the world.
It's a load of cods wallop, that's what it is. Some people paid to go see these movies and probably enjoyed them, and could'nt care less what you or the New York Times think, free money for the actors.
Sorry never saw any of them. Let's have reviews of 10 of the best.
I think a great Irish movie could be made about the annual bachelor's festival in Lizdoonvarna.As anyone who has traveled Ireland knows-You always know how many KM's you are from Lizdoonvarna.
I agree with all but "High Spirits." I enjoyed that one so much I watched it twice. Was it in the Academy Award category? Of course not. Take it for what it is, a light comedy that did indeed make fun of stereotyples. I suspect Peter O'Toole, one of my favourite actors, was in need of money to take the script. But no matter, he did a fine job and made me laugh.
The performance by the always-execrable Julia Roberts makes me want to nominate "Michael Collins" for this honor.
Actually, I agree with four of them, but "Leap Year" was a fun movie. It didn't put Ireland back into the dark ages and I saw nothing insulting about it. A naive American woman who wanted to get married heard about the ancient superstition and so decided to act upon it. The pubkeeper who got her from Dingle to Dublin showed, in no uncertain terms, how silly he thought she was (until, of course, he fell in love with her). The older gentlemen who were consistently arguing among themselves about what was and was not "good luck" remind me of the dear old Irishmen in my neighborhood when I was growing up. Now, I'm not saying the movie was good, mind you, just that it was fun and, in my opinion, not at all insulting to Ireland or her people.
What about "The Commitments"? That was the great load of turd I ever spent five bucks on.
 




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