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The ten worst Irish accents in Hollywood movies

Julia Roberts and Sean Connery may have won Oscars, but they can't pull off an Irish accent!


Sean Connery in 'Darby O'Gill and the Little People'
Sean Connery in 'Darby O'Gill and the Little People'

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Like Sean Connery, Julia Roberts is a repeat bad Irish accent offended: in 1996, she played Kitty Kiernan, the lover of Michael Collins in the movie of the same name.
 
(Although English actor Alan Rickman, playing Eamon de Valera in that movie does a pretty good job in his Irish accent - shame he didn't pass on any tips to Roberts.)
 
6. JULIA ROBERTS IN "MARY REILLY"

Things went from bad to worse for Roberts in "Mary Reilly," which was also released in 1996.
In it, she plays the title role, an Irish housemaid who becomes embroiled in a love affair with her employer Dr. Jekyll, and his alter ego, Mr. Hyde.
 
Apparently, Roberts had a voice coach for the part - and Roberts spokeswoman told a tabloid, "Julia wants her voice to be authentic."
 
Do yourself a favor, Julia - the next time you play an Irish character in a movie, get yourself a new voice coach.
 
 
7. TOM CRUISE IN "FAR AND AWAY"

To be perfectly fair to the much pilloried Tom Cruise, his Irish accent in "Far and Away" is truly appalling.
 
Joseph Donnelly, the 19th century Irish peasant played by Cruise, sounds like how a Hollywood film executive imagines Irish people talk.
 
If Cruise's Irish accent has any redeeming features it's that it might fall into the "It's so bad, it's funny" category of Irish on screen accents.
 
It also diverts attention from Nicole Kidman's efforts at an Irish accent in the same movie. (In one scene, Cruise tells Kidman, "Yer a corker, Shannon. What a corker you are!" - a well known Irish pick-up line.) While being fairly feeble, it's not the crime against Irish humanity perpetrated by her ex-husband, to be sure, to be sure.
 
8. BRAD PITT IN "THE DEVIL'S OWN"

While not sinking to the same depths as Richard Gere in "The Jackal," Brad Pitt still manages to embarrass himself - and indeed anyone from Northern Ireland - with his efforts at playing Frankie Gallagher, an IRA man on-the-run.
 
Apparently, Pitt spent a few days hanging around Belfast to perfect a Belfast accent. (He was even attacked in West Belfast while he was researching the role.)
 
Probably could have done with a few more days in Belfast....
 
9. GERARD BUTLER IN "P.S. I LOVE YOU"


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13 Comments

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Ah but Brad Pitt did a fab job on "Snatch" as a tinker. He could have fit in to any bar where knackers hang out!
Sarah Holcomb as Maggie O'Hooligan in Caddyshack. "Tanks for nuttin!"
Why not divulge which are the BEST Irish accents in Hollywood movies?
Ooh, I'd have to vote James Cromwell's unrecognizable Irish (or any other kind of) accent in L.A. Confidential above most of these. Great movie, but I cringed every time that guy opened his mouth. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0119488/
I think the tone of Connerys' voice gives him a bit of trouble with other dialects
Sean Connery doesn't do accents, even when cast as a Spaniard and as a Russian he still sounds Scottish. However, he is ethnic Irish. His first and last names are Irish, not Scottish, and he is indeed of Irish descent. Probably this convinced him he could do an Irish accent.
Ginger1: I totally agree with you!!!! That's what made "The Wind That Shakes The Barley" great, they casted Corkmen to play Corkmen in the film. A Cork accent is hard to nail down, and it was pretty much spot on. & on a side-note, they flimed allot of it in Cork also.
Here's a novel idea- just cast Irish actors!
I liked Far and away....Maybe what needs to be done is dub these movies, then the purists would be contented.
Agreed - stop running this, we get it already. But one the best accents was Meryl Streep in Dancing at Lughnasa!
In all fairness, I think John Wayne / Sean Thornton (The Quiet Man) goes to great lengths to explain that he left Ireland as a very small child and grew up in Pittsburgh. Also calling him the Yank as Danagher does would mean less if he sounded Irish.
Ann Bancroft as Annie Sullivan in "The Miracle Worker." She won the Academy Award for Best Actress. It was well-deserved, but her Irish accent, which comes and goes, is atrocious beyond belief.
My still favorite "Irish" accent is John Wayne in "The Quiet Man". Wayne did not even attempt an accent in that movie, though he was supposed to be from the area in Ireland the movie is set in.
 




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